[00:00.000 --> 00:07.680] To follow these flashes brought to you by The Lowest Star Lowdown, providing your jelly [00:07.680 --> 00:15.400] bulletins for the commodities market, Today in History, News Updates, and the inside scoop [00:15.400 --> 00:23.160] into the tides of the alternative. [00:23.160 --> 00:29.960] Markets for Wednesday 20th September 2017 closed with gold at $1,300.83 an ounce, silver $17 [00:29.960 --> 00:46.680] an ounce, Texas Crude $49.48 a barrel, Bitcoin $3,961, and Dashcoin $343 US currency. [00:46.680 --> 00:51.040] Today in History, the year 2011, the United States military under direction of the Obama [00:51.040 --> 00:55.080] administration ends its Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy, originally put in the law during the [00:55.080 --> 00:59.120] Clinton administration, repealing Don't Ask, Don't Tell has allowed gay and lesbian men [00:59.120 --> 01:06.560] and women to serve openly in the military for the first time. [01:06.560 --> 01:10.640] In recent news, at least 225 people have been confirmed dead as a result of yesterday's [01:10.640 --> 01:17.360] 7.1 earthquake, which struck 34 miles southwest of the city of Puebla in Mexico, 32 years [01:17.360 --> 01:21.800] to the day after the city's infamous quake that struck in 1985, which killed as many [01:21.800 --> 01:23.560] as 10,000 people. [01:23.560 --> 01:28.280] The most recent quake less than two weeks after the magnitude 8.1 earthquake on the seventh [01:28.280 --> 01:32.680] of this month, the epicenter of which was about 60 miles off the coast of Chiapas. [01:32.680 --> 01:36.560] Civil protection officials at the scene of at least 44 different locations where collapsed [01:36.560 --> 01:40.240] or partially classed buildings are in the city, are reporting at least 50 people being [01:40.240 --> 01:44.600] rescued out of them who were still alive, along with many dead bodies as well. [01:44.600 --> 01:48.200] Many more people are thought to be trapped within the wreckage of these damaged buildings. [01:48.200 --> 01:52.240] Mexican officials are stating that at least 39 buildings have been entirely destroyed. [01:52.240 --> 02:02.160] Police fearing aftershocks have prepared to sleep on the streets in Mexico City. [02:02.160 --> 02:06.440] A 6.1 magnitude earthquake has just hit off the eastern coast of Japan about 200 miles [02:06.440 --> 02:10.120] from the Fukushima power plant that has been in critical condition since it was struck [02:10.120 --> 02:12.800] by a tsunami in March of 2011. [02:12.800 --> 02:16.360] The quake was about 10 kilometers into the Earth's crust and there has been no reports [02:16.360 --> 02:20.240] of damages as of yet and a tsunami warning has not been issued. [02:20.240 --> 02:24.400] This is the third large quake to strike in the last 24 hours after the disastrous one [02:24.400 --> 02:28.360] in Mexico and a smaller one in New Zealand. [02:28.360 --> 02:35.960] Astronomers have informed the public that in just this past week, three never-before-discovered [02:35.960 --> 02:39.840] asteroids were spotted after they flew by Earth, around the close. [02:39.840 --> 02:45.000] Of the three, the largest, Asteroid 2017 SQ2, was spotted in hindsight on Monday nearly [02:45.000 --> 02:50.760] four days after the warehouse-sized chunk of space rock skimmed by 125,000 miles above [02:50.760 --> 02:51.760] Earth. [02:51.760 --> 03:20.760] This was work brought to you as a lowdown for September 20th, 2017. [03:20.760 --> 03:38.020] All right. [03:38.020 --> 03:47.760] Sorry. [03:47.760 --> 04:04.160] Okay, howdy, howdy, this is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Rural Ball Radio on this, [04:04.160 --> 04:13.960] the 21st day of September, 2017, and we're going to start out with a couple of guests. [04:13.960 --> 04:20.160] We're going to start out with Scott Richardson, whoa, I've got three on the guest bridge, [04:20.160 --> 04:23.920] generally we don't use the guest bridge, but I've got three up there now, I'm not sure [04:23.920 --> 04:31.200] what's going on with the third one, but we have someone from Houston area who is taking [04:31.200 --> 04:37.800] these guys on and I'm going to, I brought Scott in with him to kind of help mentor [04:37.800 --> 04:45.160] him so we can get him to be the kind of force that Scott is in Garland. [04:45.160 --> 04:51.720] Hello Scott, before we go to James, kind of give us an update on what's going on with [04:51.720 --> 04:53.720] your cases. [04:53.720 --> 05:04.480] Okay, I had been following lawsuits against judges and already have one judge over in [05:04.480 --> 05:11.040] Mesquite that has been ordered by district court to meet me in mediation. [05:11.040 --> 05:20.400] So now just waiting on the mediator to get in touch with Judge Crane, the municipal judge [05:20.400 --> 05:26.760] over in Mesquite so we can sit down and have a little heart-to-heart conversation about [05:26.760 --> 05:36.560] quizleings and being held in contempt and how he has the authority to order me to alter [05:36.560 --> 05:38.800] a government record. [05:38.800 --> 05:46.200] So he's going to have some fun explaining that one and then today I just got a letter [05:46.200 --> 05:52.880] because I filed on Judge Dwight in Addison, this is the infamous case where I had my window [05:52.880 --> 06:00.920] smashed and the video that I made went viral and it's over 2.2 million views now. [06:00.920 --> 06:08.640] But anyhow, the attorney that's representing Judge Dwight sent me a response today that [06:08.640 --> 06:17.200] they have filed that is almost unbelievable what they wrote in this thing. [06:17.200 --> 06:24.560] Not only did they not address any of the issues, it wasn't very well written, seems like. [06:24.560 --> 06:32.560] So it's really kind of comical on that and so this is going to be. [06:32.560 --> 06:36.680] Let me read it, I've got it up here. [06:36.680 --> 06:40.560] Defendants original answer, I'm reading it because it won't take long. [06:40.560 --> 06:45.000] The honorable judge has said court now comes to defendant James Larry Dwight, defendant [06:45.000 --> 06:52.520] and by way of response to the August 17th, 2002 original petition would show as follows. [06:52.520 --> 06:58.800] General denial, defendant generally denies each and every all in singular the allegations [06:58.800 --> 07:04.040] in plaintiff's petition and demands strict proof thereof. [07:04.040 --> 07:08.000] Alternative defences and special denials. [07:08.000 --> 07:14.440] Defendant Judge Dwight is entitled to absolute judicial immunity at all times relevant to [07:14.440 --> 07:15.720] the claims against him. [07:15.720 --> 07:19.240] He was performing judicial functions. [07:19.240 --> 07:27.160] Judge Dwight also acted in good faith performance of his official discretionary authority as [07:27.160 --> 07:34.760] municipal court judge and did not knowingly violate clearly established law and is entitled [07:34.760 --> 07:38.720] to official immunity and qualified immunity. [07:38.720 --> 07:48.000] He said, did not knowingly violate clearly established law. [07:48.000 --> 07:57.840] Now Scott, you're just an old ignorant pro se and you could claim that you did not knowingly [07:57.840 --> 08:07.680] violate law, but this is not the end of pro se, this is a judge, you know, I read this [08:07.680 --> 08:19.640] and I thought why on earth did that lawyer put knowingly in there because he didn't know. [08:19.640 --> 08:28.320] Now he screwed the screws doctor and screws the US and it says that a private citizen [08:28.320 --> 08:32.520] cannot claim ignorance as a defense to prosecution. [08:32.520 --> 08:37.920] A public official in a position to affect the rights of a citizen is held to a much higher [08:37.920 --> 08:47.280] standard if a public official violates a ruling of this court and he be sane, he may not be [08:47.280 --> 08:56.480] heard to say he knows not what he does, is this lawyer out of his professional mind? [08:56.480 --> 09:01.040] Had he left knowingly out of there? [09:01.040 --> 09:04.880] The judge acted in good faith performance of his discretionary authority as a municipal [09:04.880 --> 09:10.000] court judge and did not violate clearly established law. [09:10.000 --> 09:16.000] That's not what he said, he didn't say he didn't violate clearly established law, he [09:16.000 --> 09:22.400] said he did not knowingly violate clearly established law. [09:22.400 --> 09:28.000] Scott, what's the objection you raise? [09:28.000 --> 09:33.640] The objection is he is deemed to know the law. [09:33.640 --> 09:44.040] Adjection relevance, not relevant whether or not the judge knew he was violating law. [09:44.040 --> 09:51.000] He is presumed to know the law so whether he knew what he was doing or not is not relevant. [09:51.000 --> 09:55.800] This is about the dumbest response I think I've ever seen. [09:55.800 --> 10:06.560] This is classic and this is the judge who refused to let me speak in my own motions hearing [10:06.560 --> 10:16.080] and told me basically to shut up that I don't know the law, I can't speak the law and just [10:16.080 --> 10:21.840] dismissed everything that I brought forward outright and wouldn't even let me talk and [10:21.840 --> 10:27.000] was about to stick his bailiff on me and trying to find me in contempt of court. [10:27.000 --> 10:31.840] Well, let's see how that works for him. [10:31.840 --> 10:42.120] Okay, this is how we handle recalcitrant judges and now I'm looking at this, this needs to [10:42.120 --> 10:48.680] get a motion for summary judgment because the judge did not deny the fact that he acted [10:48.680 --> 10:52.480] in violation of law. [10:52.480 --> 10:57.680] He claims that he acted in his official capacity. [10:57.680 --> 11:08.680] Well, the way I read the code, committing criminal acts is not within scope and a judge [11:08.680 --> 11:14.280] has jurisdiction so long as he acts within scope. [11:14.280 --> 11:23.480] When he acts outside of scope, he's not acting in his judicial capacity, he's acting in his [11:23.480 --> 11:24.480] personal capacity. [11:24.480 --> 11:25.480] Okay. [11:25.480 --> 11:26.480] Agreed. [11:26.480 --> 11:37.280] So, if you got this was great fun, what else have you done this week that's interesting? [11:37.280 --> 11:46.880] Oh, well, Monday, I had gotten a ticket last Thursday, which I immediately filed a T close [11:46.880 --> 11:54.520] on this officer, Moderana, the Garland Police Department, three hours after I got the ticket. [11:54.520 --> 11:57.680] The next day, everybody probably heard it from last week. [11:57.680 --> 11:58.680] Three hours? [11:58.680 --> 11:59.680] Three hours? [11:59.680 --> 12:01.680] What took you so long? [12:01.680 --> 12:06.760] Well, you know, shoot, I had to come back and eat, you know. [12:06.760 --> 12:13.280] So, I came back home, grabbed me something to eat, sat down, whipped out a criminal complaint [12:13.280 --> 12:19.880] in about 30 minutes, got it all printed up, hopped the whole the butt right on down to [12:19.880 --> 12:25.440] the police department, put it in their drop box, so he'd have it the very next morning. [12:25.440 --> 12:31.560] Well, that was on a Thursday, so Friday morning, I turn around and go right back down there [12:31.560 --> 12:37.440] to go file another criminal complaint against that cop and the chief of police. [12:37.440 --> 12:42.680] And this was about eight o'clock in the morning, I was down there, so I dropped it off when [12:42.680 --> 12:47.720] I'm leaving the police station and I had to pull up to a light, guess who's sitting across [12:47.720 --> 12:48.720] the street? [12:48.720 --> 12:54.840] It was that officer, Moderana, on his old motorcycle staring at me and I'm staring at [12:54.840 --> 12:55.840] him. [12:55.840 --> 13:01.040] And he's already saw he had a criminal complaint on him, I'm sure they told him that morning [13:01.040 --> 13:05.600] and he's probably wondering why I'm leaving the police department again. [13:05.600 --> 13:11.480] And when he got there, he figured it out, I already filed another T-clothes complaint [13:11.480 --> 13:15.360] on him and the chief of police. [13:15.360 --> 13:22.320] Well, you know, Monday morning, I went ahead and went down to district court, filed a lawsuit [13:22.320 --> 13:27.320] against him for abuse of process and the chief of police. [13:27.320 --> 13:34.000] So that was Monday, Tuesday, went ahead and drafted me up, noticed a tort to the mayor, [13:34.000 --> 13:41.560] went down there to the city hall, gave the mayor his tort letter and then got them all [13:41.560 --> 13:46.440] squared away and started working on some of my other suits that I was going to start putting [13:46.440 --> 13:50.040] together, which I've already kind of got ready to go. [13:50.040 --> 13:55.040] I'm sending out torts to mayors, I'm really kind of winding these guys up. [13:55.040 --> 14:02.640] And so it was the following Monday, oh, it was just this past Monday, I went back down [14:02.640 --> 14:10.120] to the police station and I got all my paperwork off the traffic ticket dot website. [14:10.120 --> 14:15.640] Everybody needs to go to traffic ticket dot website, put in your information, let it spit [14:15.640 --> 14:20.200] out the hundred pages of documents so you can go and do this. [14:20.200 --> 14:26.720] So once you get all those, all that paperwork printed off, you go get it all notarized, [14:26.720 --> 14:32.240] then you go make your copies, one for the court, one for the prosecutor and one for you. [14:32.240 --> 14:36.840] So now you really have about 300 pages of documents. [14:36.840 --> 14:43.160] So I'm standing in line and this one old boy, he's a big old boy, he was sitting there staring [14:43.160 --> 14:50.000] at me and he said, are you an attorney or either you're an attorney or you got an awful [14:50.000 --> 14:51.000] lot of tickets? [14:51.000 --> 14:52.520] And I said, it's neither. [14:52.520 --> 14:56.240] I said, I bought my tickets, I suggest you do the same. [14:56.240 --> 15:01.800] So I gave him the rule of law radio and told him about the traffic ticket dot website if [15:01.800 --> 15:06.400] he ever wanted to buy his tickets, you know, and he said, oh, I'm really interested in [15:06.400 --> 15:07.400] that. [15:07.400 --> 15:08.400] I said, well, turn it in. [15:08.400 --> 15:12.120] You might actually hear me on there sometime, which he met me. [15:12.120 --> 15:17.480] So anyhow, I waited, now the lady calls me up to the window. [15:17.480 --> 15:19.160] Now this is really fun. [15:19.160 --> 15:21.000] So I get up to the window. [15:21.000 --> 15:23.400] I have this huge stack of paperwork. [15:23.400 --> 15:29.320] So I break out the subject matter jurisdiction one and I got three copies, right? [15:29.320 --> 15:31.920] Well, this lady has her mic all plugged in. [15:31.920 --> 15:37.000] She's sitting at the desk and I shove all these, these first set of papers into the [15:37.000 --> 15:38.000] window. [15:38.000 --> 15:40.080] I said, I need you to file these for me. [15:40.080 --> 15:41.640] She goes, are you an attorney? [15:41.640 --> 15:43.200] I need to see your bar card. [15:43.200 --> 15:44.880] I said, I'm not an attorney. [15:44.880 --> 15:47.240] She goes, well, you can't file this. [15:47.240 --> 15:51.400] I said, I'm pro say and I'm filing these in my own behalf. [15:51.400 --> 15:58.120] She goes, oh, and so she unplugged her little mic, gets up, takes all those papers over [15:58.120 --> 16:02.560] and goes and file stamps each individual page. [16:02.560 --> 16:03.560] Okay. [16:03.560 --> 16:05.240] So I'm standing there. [16:05.240 --> 16:07.640] I'm thinking, man, this is going to take a while. [16:07.640 --> 16:09.800] And so anyhow, she comes back. [16:09.800 --> 16:11.760] I said, well, I need to get my copy. [16:11.760 --> 16:16.160] So she hands me my copy back and as soon as she hands me my copy back. [16:16.160 --> 16:21.160] I hand her the next stack, which is, I can't remember. [16:21.160 --> 16:28.000] I think it was probably about the, oh, shoot, I'm thinking too fast right now. [16:28.000 --> 16:34.760] Anyway, so I just handed the next stack into her and she's going, do you have any more [16:34.760 --> 16:35.760] papers? [16:35.760 --> 16:37.400] I said, oh, yes, ma'am. [16:37.400 --> 16:39.960] And by this time, oh, we've got the music playing. [16:39.960 --> 16:41.760] Go ahead and take a break. [16:41.760 --> 16:42.760] Okay. [16:42.760 --> 16:43.760] Hang on. [16:43.760 --> 16:46.440] Hi, I'm Debra Stevens, we live on radio. [16:46.440 --> 16:55.160] I call in number 512-646-1984 and I'm making sure that the caller page is open. [16:55.160 --> 16:58.520] So if you have a question or comment, give us a call. [16:58.520 --> 17:00.520] We'll be right back. [17:00.520 --> 17:01.520] Thanks, Cookie. [17:01.520 --> 17:02.520] Cookie? [17:02.520 --> 17:03.520] Me love cookies. [17:03.520 --> 17:04.520] Oh, hi, Cookie Munchers. [17:04.520 --> 17:06.520] No, these are yucky cookies. [17:06.520 --> 17:07.520] Cookie? [17:07.520 --> 17:08.520] Yucky? [17:08.520 --> 17:09.520] No, no bad cookies. [17:09.520 --> 17:11.240] You can't even eat these cookies. [17:11.240 --> 17:12.720] These are cyber cookies. [17:12.720 --> 17:14.120] No, you can't eat. [17:14.120 --> 17:17.320] No, they are cyber cookies and they clog up your computer. [17:17.320 --> 17:18.320] These have apples. [17:18.320 --> 17:19.320] Really? [17:19.320 --> 17:21.320] Oh, that's an actual apple. [17:21.320 --> 17:22.320] Yummy apple. [17:22.320 --> 17:26.920] I'm going to throw away these yucky cookies in the trash. [17:26.920 --> 17:33.120] I click control, shift, delete and then scroll down to cookies and clear them. [17:33.120 --> 17:34.640] Bye bye, yucky cookies. [17:34.640 --> 17:40.320] Now I go to logosradionetwork.com and I click on the Amazon box on the upper right hand [17:40.320 --> 17:46.320] side, bookmark the link and I can go to Amazon through this link and order you some yummy [17:46.320 --> 17:47.320] new cookie. [17:47.320 --> 17:48.320] New cookies? [17:48.320 --> 17:49.320] What's my name? [17:49.320 --> 17:53.720] Consider it an early Christmas present and every time I order on Amazon, I go through [17:53.720 --> 17:57.640] this link and I give a little present to this radio network too. [17:57.640 --> 17:58.640] These are cookies. [17:58.640 --> 18:00.640] These are classified. [18:00.640 --> 18:05.960] Are you being harassed by debt collectors with phone calls, letters or even losses? [18:05.960 --> 18:09.640] Stop debt collectors now with the Michael Meares proven method. [18:09.640 --> 18:13.760] Michael Meares has won six cases in federal court against debt collectors and now you [18:13.760 --> 18:14.760] can win two. [18:14.760 --> 18:19.600] You'll get step-by-step instructions in plain English on how to win in court using federal [18:19.600 --> 18:25.440] civil rights statute, what to do when contacted by phones, mail or court summons, how to answer [18:25.440 --> 18:30.000] letters and phone calls, how to get debt collectors out of your credit report, how to turn the [18:30.000 --> 18:34.200] financial tables on them and make them pay you to go away. [18:34.200 --> 18:39.320] The Michael Meares proven method is the solution for how to stop debt collectors. [18:39.320 --> 18:41.440] Federal consultation is available as well. [18:41.440 --> 18:46.960] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Meares banner [18:46.960 --> 18:49.960] or email Michael Meares at yahoo.com. [18:49.960 --> 18:59.520] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors [18:59.520 --> 19:00.520] next. [19:00.520 --> 19:14.040] Thank you for listening to the Logos Radio Network. [19:14.040 --> 19:19.240] Logos Radio Network.com. [19:19.240 --> 19:36.200] Okay, we are back, Randy Kelton, rule of law radio, Randy Kelton Deborah Stevens, rule [19:36.200 --> 19:39.360] of law radio, and we're talking to Scott in Texas. [19:39.360 --> 19:41.600] Okay, Scott, where were we? [19:41.600 --> 19:46.840] Okay, well, I turned in my first stack of paperwork and now she handed me my copy. [19:46.840 --> 19:49.800] He's back on the subject matter jurisdiction. [19:49.800 --> 19:57.040] Now I stick in the next round of paperwork, so she unplugged her little mic and she takes [19:57.040 --> 20:01.800] that little stack and runs over and goes and file stamps each individual page again. [20:01.800 --> 20:07.280] Well, by this time, I'm taking all my other paperwork and I'm making piles, so I got them [20:07.280 --> 20:08.760] all in order. [20:08.760 --> 20:14.840] I've got the whole floor covered around me at this window, and I got people standing [20:14.840 --> 20:20.280] there in line looking at me like, what is going on here? [20:20.280 --> 20:27.800] And I am stomping up the show because nobody could get nothing done because I'm hogging [20:27.800 --> 20:29.320] up the counter. [20:29.320 --> 20:34.200] Well, unbeknownst to me, there was some guy in line. [20:34.200 --> 20:40.760] He actually recognized me, and he wound up coming over in a few minutes, but before that. [20:40.760 --> 20:45.920] So now she comes back after stamping that, and I start to stick in the next round of [20:45.920 --> 20:50.480] paperwork, and she looks at me and she goes, do you have any more papers you're going to [20:50.480 --> 20:51.480] file? [20:51.480 --> 20:52.920] I said, oh, yes, ma'am. [20:52.920 --> 20:58.080] By this time, I reach down and grab up all these other papers with the big old stack [20:58.080 --> 21:01.560] about an inch thick, and I plop them up there on the counter. [21:01.560 --> 21:07.560] I said, oh, this has got to go in too, and she's like, oh, my, this is going to take [21:07.560 --> 21:08.560] a few minutes. [21:08.560 --> 21:12.400] I said, that's fine, I'll wait right here. [21:12.400 --> 21:18.200] So by this time, she's over there just stamping away each individual page. [21:18.200 --> 21:23.080] Well, this guy comes up and walks over to me and says, hey, Scott, how's it going? [21:23.080 --> 21:28.320] I didn't know this guy from Adam, and he said, I recognize you from YouTube. [21:28.320 --> 21:31.320] I'm like, oh, my goodness me. [21:31.320 --> 21:38.280] So we start talking, and he just says there, he talked to me the whole time. [21:38.280 --> 21:43.800] So this lady finally comes back with all the papers and gives me all my copies and sets [21:43.800 --> 21:45.640] me up for a court date. [21:45.640 --> 21:48.000] I said, oh, that's just perfect. [21:48.000 --> 21:49.560] I'll see y'all then. [21:49.560 --> 21:54.920] And here was a really good one, a good lick too, because one of them is an information [21:54.920 --> 21:55.920] request. [21:55.920 --> 22:02.280] So by law, they have 15 days to answer that information request. [22:02.280 --> 22:07.360] Typically what happens, and this happens to most people, you stick all this paperwork [22:07.360 --> 22:14.280] in, they go put it in a folder, and they don't open that folder up to the day of court. [22:14.280 --> 22:16.640] And that's what I'm hoping for. [22:16.640 --> 22:22.040] That way 15 days have already passed, and they haven't answered my information request. [22:22.040 --> 22:29.840] I got them right there, because the tort letter that I just filed against the mayor in East [22:29.840 --> 22:37.440] Tewalkeny was because the police refused to answer my information request on the officer's [22:37.440 --> 22:41.800] authority to enforce traffic for their authority. [22:41.800 --> 22:45.280] They never answered my information request. [22:45.280 --> 22:49.400] So that's the lawsuit that I'm starting with on them. [22:49.400 --> 22:52.040] So I'm kind of hoping. [22:52.040 --> 23:01.960] The 52.353 Texas government code, a violation of the Open Records Act, Open Government [23:01.960 --> 23:07.760] Act is a class A misdemeanor official misconduct. [23:07.760 --> 23:12.960] The Open Records Act in Texas is not a civil statute. [23:12.960 --> 23:19.520] While you can file a civil action, the statute is a criminal statute, so you can charge them [23:19.520 --> 23:22.520] criminally. [23:22.520 --> 23:23.920] Isn't that lovely? [23:23.920 --> 23:30.000] I can't wait, because I got so many plans for Reigns County. [23:30.000 --> 23:35.400] This was just the first salvo just to kind of let them know that I didn't go away like [23:35.400 --> 23:36.880] they thought I would. [23:36.880 --> 23:40.320] In fact, it's only going to get worse from here. [23:40.320 --> 23:44.960] So that was a shot across the bow for them. [23:44.960 --> 23:50.240] Now Garland's going to be sitting in the same situation, especially if they stuff that thing [23:50.240 --> 23:56.680] in a folder and don't open it until October 4th, and then they realize they never answered [23:56.680 --> 23:59.360] that information request. [23:59.360 --> 24:00.760] And here's the kicker. [24:00.760 --> 24:06.160] I've already put in an information request on their authority for Garland's authority. [24:06.160 --> 24:11.480] They refused to answer it, so I bargered the attorney that came back with his non-responsive [24:11.480 --> 24:16.360] answer, so they already know that I have filed this before. [24:16.360 --> 24:22.800] So they're going to be like, oh no, it's this guy again, and that's going to be real [24:22.800 --> 24:24.560] interesting for them. [24:24.560 --> 24:30.000] Well, the guy that was standing in line that came over and talked to me, he goes, man, [24:30.000 --> 24:32.200] I heard you on your last video. [24:32.200 --> 24:36.000] He said, you must, you were really mad. [24:36.000 --> 24:37.000] You were just pissed. [24:37.000 --> 24:42.320] And I was like, yeah, you know, I'm really tired of telling everybody how to go about [24:42.320 --> 24:48.840] this stuff, to listen to the shows, to go to trafficticket.website, get this paperwork [24:48.840 --> 24:54.200] and start stuffing these courts full because nobody's paying attention. [24:54.200 --> 24:59.240] So I'm just about ready to delete my YouTube channel on January 1st. [24:59.240 --> 25:03.840] And he was just like, oh man, can I get your phone number? [25:03.840 --> 25:05.880] He wanted to be my best friend. [25:05.880 --> 25:10.560] I want to be able to talk to you in case I ever have any more problems. [25:10.560 --> 25:14.000] I told him, I said, well, shoot, you need to tune into the show. [25:14.000 --> 25:18.040] And you can start, you know, figuring out what's going on too. [25:18.040 --> 25:26.520] So we'll see if he does or doesn't, but anyhow, that's kind of what's going on right now. [25:26.520 --> 25:33.200] This is why I brought you up on the guest bridge along with James Curran. [25:33.200 --> 25:40.960] You're frustrated and concerned that you're going to all this effort to try to help educate [25:40.960 --> 25:49.320] people to the rights and what they can do to stop the local police from abusing the [25:49.320 --> 25:56.200] law and using the traffic codes as a way of generating extra revenue. [25:56.200 --> 25:58.920] Well, we have James Cuenon. [25:58.920 --> 26:00.920] Hello, James. [26:00.920 --> 26:03.920] Hello, Randy, how are you? [26:03.920 --> 26:08.880] Okay, James Cuenon just went to the website. [26:08.880 --> 26:16.080] He loaded up his ticket information along with him and a couple of friends of his and [26:16.080 --> 26:21.640] just went to court and they really jerked him around. [26:21.640 --> 26:26.640] James, will you kind of give us a brief on what happened to you in court? [26:26.640 --> 26:32.800] Well, I was there to help out Jason and a friend of mine on his ticket. [26:32.800 --> 26:37.720] This was something different than what I did on the Traffic Dot website where you gave [26:37.720 --> 26:39.560] me the information on mine. [26:39.560 --> 26:45.080] But basically, I was there as just an assistant, you know, to help this guy out in case he [26:45.080 --> 26:48.520] could ran into any issues because he was new into all of this. [26:48.520 --> 26:56.120] But basically, once the judge had denied the motion or denied to even accept his paperwork, [26:56.120 --> 27:03.160] which was never even looked at, that he got from the traffic website as well. [27:03.160 --> 27:08.920] The gentleman then, my friend Jason, went to challenge Subject Matters Jurisdiction [27:08.920 --> 27:13.120] and then he overruled him and then he overruled this and he overruled the next thing. [27:13.120 --> 27:18.920] Well, then I stepped up and I said, you know, can I have a point of clarification on why [27:18.920 --> 27:22.600] you're just automatically overruling all of this stuff? [27:22.600 --> 27:28.160] Well, as I explained to you earlier, I had already been in a date to date in Texas court [27:28.160 --> 27:33.240] myself and it previously had an encounter with the prosecutor and the judge and it beat [27:33.240 --> 27:34.720] my ticket. [27:34.720 --> 27:36.920] So they basically knew who I was. [27:36.920 --> 27:45.760] Well, once I started putting out there the assumptions of law and then started saying [27:45.760 --> 27:50.720] because the prosecutor wanted to tell me that I was not an attorney, I had no right to be [27:50.720 --> 27:53.840] giving this guy any kind of legal advice. [27:53.840 --> 28:03.680] I had broke out the paperwork and everything and started reading to him on the fact that [28:03.680 --> 28:07.800] practice of laws are common right and started reading the things to him and started giving [28:07.800 --> 28:08.800] him case law. [28:08.800 --> 28:15.040] Well, the prosecutor immediately shut me down, told the judge that I needed to be escorted [28:15.040 --> 28:17.400] out of the courtroom. [28:17.400 --> 28:21.240] At that time, I had two bailiffs come and grab me forcefully. [28:21.240 --> 28:27.320] I'm a paraplegic as of 20 years as I explained to you, but they forcefully grabbed my wheelchair [28:27.320 --> 28:33.720] and was trying to forcefully remove me from the courtroom as I was trying to grab my binder [28:33.720 --> 28:38.920] and my other documents, my folders and stuff that I had sitting on the bench next to me. [28:38.920 --> 28:43.880] And I immediately told the officers to take their hands off of me that I was gathering [28:43.880 --> 28:49.160] my stuff and that I would leave without any cause whatsoever. [28:49.160 --> 28:55.320] So we were videotaping this the whole time, but anyway, I had the officers relinquish [28:55.320 --> 28:59.240] their grip on my wheelchair and tugging at me and all this, got all this stuff, put it [28:59.240 --> 29:02.240] in my lap, wheeled myself out of the courtroom. [29:02.240 --> 29:10.080] As soon as I got outside the courtroom doors, the officer, Mr. Eric Ibera from the Dayton [29:10.080 --> 29:15.520] Police Department, he decided to ask me for my identification. [29:15.520 --> 29:20.920] And I refused to him under Penal Code 3802B, I told him, I said, I have no right to identify [29:20.920 --> 29:25.480] myself to you due to the fact that I've not committed any crime. [29:25.480 --> 29:29.920] I said, you have to articulate some kind of a crime that I have committed. [29:29.920 --> 29:38.600] And at this point, the only thing I did was object to what the judge was doing as a matter [29:38.600 --> 29:43.880] of going past subject matter jurisdiction and just overruling everything. [29:43.880 --> 29:48.240] And due to the fact that the judge and the prosecutor knew me, they just automatically [29:48.240 --> 29:51.240] wanted me shoved out of the courtroom. [29:51.240 --> 29:59.440] So since I was then held to identify myself, him and another bailiff automatically. [29:59.440 --> 30:13.480] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht and I'll be back to tell you why you should regularly delete [30:13.480 --> 30:17.360] cookies from your computer in just a moment. [30:17.360 --> 30:18.960] Privacy is under attack. [30:18.960 --> 30:22.560] When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [30:22.560 --> 30:27.320] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [30:27.320 --> 30:32.280] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [30:32.280 --> 30:35.080] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. [30:35.080 --> 30:39.440] This public service announcement is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search [30:39.440 --> 30:42.880] engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [30:42.880 --> 30:46.320] Start over with StartPage. [30:46.320 --> 30:50.560] Cookies are bits of data stored on your computer's hard drive when you visit a website. [30:50.560 --> 30:55.080] Some cookies are harmless, but many websites use so-called tracking cookies that can monitor [30:55.080 --> 30:58.640] your internet behavior and create a profile of you, secretly. [30:58.640 --> 31:03.960] This is especially problematic when you're tracked at search engines like Google or Bing. [31:03.960 --> 31:07.480] Your search records can reveal a shocking amount of personal information, like your [31:07.480 --> 31:10.120] interests, your medical conditions, and more. [31:10.120 --> 31:14.200] You can configure your browser to automatically delete cookies or never accept them in the [31:14.200 --> 31:15.200] first place. [31:15.200 --> 31:19.320] There are also programs for deleting trickier tracking cookies called flash cookies. [31:19.320 --> 31:23.880] I'm Dr. Katherine Albrecht, encouraging smart surfing and the use of more privacy-friendly [31:23.880 --> 31:26.200] websites like StartPage.com. [31:26.200 --> 31:30.640] More news and information at KatherineAlbrecht.com. [31:30.640 --> 31:36.040] This is Building 7, a 47-story skyscraper that fell on the afternoon of September 11th. [31:36.040 --> 31:38.240] The government says that fire brought it down. [31:38.240 --> 31:43.080] However, 1,500 architects and engineers have concluded it was a controlled demolition. [31:43.080 --> 31:47.080] Over 6,000 of my fellow service members have given their lives, and thousands of my fellow [31:47.080 --> 31:48.520] force responders are dying. [31:48.520 --> 31:52.360] I'm not a conspiracy theorist, I'm a structural engineer, I'm a New York City correction officer, [31:52.360 --> 31:53.360] I'm an Air Force pilot. [31:53.360 --> 31:55.080] I'm a father who lost his son. [31:55.080 --> 31:57.640] We're Americans, and we deserve the truth. [31:57.640 --> 32:00.640] Go to RememberBuilding7.org today. [32:00.640 --> 32:05.200] Rule of Law Radio is proud to offer the Rule of Law Traffic Seminar. [32:05.200 --> 32:08.920] In today's America, we live in an us-against-them society, and if we the people are ever going [32:08.920 --> 32:12.760] to have a free society, then we're going to have to stand in to defend our own rights. [32:12.760 --> 32:15.880] Among those rights are the right to travel freely from place to place, the right to [32:15.880 --> 32:20.120] act in our own private capacity, and most importantly, the right to due process of law. [32:20.120 --> 32:24.000] Rule of Law Courts afford us the least expensive opportunity to learn how to enforce and preserve [32:24.000 --> 32:25.560] our rights through due process. [32:25.560 --> 32:29.360] Former Sheriff's Deputy Eddie Craig, in conjunction with Rule of Law Radio, has put together the [32:29.360 --> 32:33.120] most comprehensive teaching tool available that will help you understand what due process [32:33.120 --> 32:35.520] is and how to hold courts to the rule of law. [32:35.520 --> 32:39.520] You can get your own copy of this invaluable material by going to ruleoflawradio.com and [32:39.520 --> 32:40.840] ordering your copy today. [32:40.840 --> 32:44.160] By ordering now, you'll receive a copy of Eddie's book, The Texas Transportation Code, [32:44.160 --> 32:47.800] The Law Versus the Life, video and audio of the original 2009 seminar. [32:47.800 --> 32:50.880] Hundreds of research documents and other useful resource material. [32:50.880 --> 32:54.880] Learn how to fight for your rights with the help of this material from ruleoflawradio.com. [32:54.880 --> 33:24.720] For your copy today and together we can have the free society we all want and deserve. [33:24.720 --> 33:25.720] Okay. [33:25.720 --> 33:26.720] We are back. [33:26.720 --> 33:27.720] Randy Kelton there with Stevens. [33:27.720 --> 33:28.720] Rule of Law Radio. [33:28.720 --> 33:31.600] And let us run off the cliff that time. [33:31.600 --> 33:34.040] We're going back to James. [33:34.040 --> 33:35.040] Go ahead, James. [33:35.040 --> 33:36.040] All right. [33:36.040 --> 33:41.480] So I'm not sure where exactly we got dropped, but I'll step back a little ways. [33:41.480 --> 33:46.360] So anyway, at the proceedings where the judge was just overruling everything, and like I [33:46.360 --> 33:52.640] said, I had already had my day in court with Dayton and this particular judge and this [33:52.640 --> 33:56.120] prosecutor, and I beat them in their own game. [33:56.120 --> 34:02.480] So I was basically there just as a guest for my friend, just in case he got jumbled up. [34:02.480 --> 34:08.920] But anyway, I was then the prosecutor then knew who I was, told the judge to have me [34:08.920 --> 34:10.520] escorted from the courtroom. [34:10.520 --> 34:15.680] So like I said, these two bailiffs came over, they grabbed my wheelchair, tried to forcefully [34:15.680 --> 34:20.000] make me leave and everything, and I told him, I said, hey, wait a minute, man, let me get [34:20.000 --> 34:21.000] my stuff together. [34:21.000 --> 34:22.720] I don't have to grab my wheelchair. [34:22.720 --> 34:25.880] I'm more than capable of willing myself out here. [34:25.880 --> 34:30.960] James, when you went out, you were out in the hall and they were asking you for your [34:30.960 --> 34:31.960] identification. [34:31.960 --> 34:32.960] Yeah. [34:32.960 --> 34:33.960] Okay. [34:33.960 --> 34:34.960] So that's where I went out. [34:34.960 --> 34:39.880] So anyway, I was out in the hall and the officer asked for my identification, and that's [34:39.880 --> 34:44.440] where I clarified Penal Code 3802B and I told him in the state of Texas, you don't have [34:44.440 --> 34:48.360] to identify yourself unless you can articulate a crime that I've committed. [34:48.360 --> 34:51.280] I've not injured or harmed anybody in this courtroom. [34:51.280 --> 34:53.800] I've not stolen anything in this courtroom. [34:53.800 --> 34:57.640] So at this fact, at this point, I don't have to identify myself to you. [34:57.640 --> 35:02.040] Well, from that point, this when the handcuffs went on, they were trying to handcuff me behind [35:02.040 --> 35:03.480] my wheelchair. [35:03.480 --> 35:06.640] They cut and bruised both of my wrists. [35:06.640 --> 35:11.480] I had a female officer in there telling me to stop resisting and I'm like, look, I can [35:11.480 --> 35:15.080] only get my arms behind me as far as they'll go. [35:15.080 --> 35:19.120] Maybe you want to try to use two pair of handcuffs and she's like, we are using two [35:19.120 --> 35:20.120] pair. [35:20.120 --> 35:25.200] And anyway, so they finally, they decided they can't get me handcuffed, so they handcuffed [35:25.200 --> 35:31.240] me in front of myself, take me into another room, do their stuff that they do on the computer [35:31.240 --> 35:38.240] there at the Dayton Police Department, then I'm taken out back and put into one of their [35:38.240 --> 35:42.240] four explorers and I'm escorted to the Liberty County Jail. [35:42.240 --> 35:45.840] I get to the Liberty County Jail, I'm going through a booking process. [35:45.840 --> 35:50.360] The nurse comes in, she evaluates me, she asks me all of my conditions. [35:50.360 --> 35:54.800] She gets on the phone with her supervisor, she says, we can't house this guy. [35:54.800 --> 35:58.320] So the Dayton Police Officer, he's pissed at this point. [35:58.320 --> 36:03.840] So anyway, he has to load me back up, take me back to Dayton, but let's step back. [36:03.840 --> 36:08.120] I turned to him and I said, so I guess you're going to put out a 2B warrant for me. [36:08.120 --> 36:11.080] He kind of looked at me and I told him, I said, yeah, I said, believe me. [36:11.080 --> 36:14.080] I said, I know a little bit more about the law than what you think and I said, that's [36:14.080 --> 36:19.240] why Brandon and the judge asked you to escort me out and I said, you have no idea who your [36:19.240 --> 36:20.920] fool was at this point. [36:20.920 --> 36:24.840] I said, I know a lot of attorneys and different things, I said, but we'll get to that point [36:24.840 --> 36:26.080] later. [36:26.080 --> 36:30.440] And so anyway, we proceeded to get back in his vehicle, make the 20-minute drive back [36:30.440 --> 36:35.640] to Dayton, pulled up, my two buddies are on a recess. [36:35.640 --> 36:39.240] He lets me out of my vehicle, I get back in my chair and everything. [36:39.240 --> 36:43.720] The first thing I do, I tell them, I'm going in, I start doing my open records request [36:43.720 --> 36:48.320] on getting everything that had happened at that moment in time. [36:48.320 --> 36:54.200] Any kind of video cams that was on their bodies, any kind of recordings, audios, videos, anything [36:54.200 --> 36:58.760] from the courthouse, charges, fines, anything that I could do with it. [36:58.760 --> 37:03.520] By the time I get done, they're done with my buddy Jason's thing. [37:03.520 --> 37:08.160] He's already been denied everything, so he does an appeal, they come out, we're talking, [37:08.160 --> 37:13.640] I shake hands with Jason, he goes to leave, because James and I are getting in my vehicle, [37:13.640 --> 37:18.760] these other police officers pull back in, come over to me and they said, don't even bother [37:18.760 --> 37:22.280] getting in your vehicle, the warrant's been signed, you're under arrest. [37:22.280 --> 37:26.520] And I'm like, wait a minute, you done took me to Liberty County once, they done told [37:26.520 --> 37:27.880] you they can't house me. [37:27.880 --> 37:29.600] No, they're going to house me. [37:29.600 --> 37:36.640] So I ended up spending the night in jail, got two warrants that were issued for me, one [37:36.640 --> 37:44.920] of them was, but to the fact of failure to identify, the other one was for, what was [37:44.920 --> 38:00.040] it, it was for disrupting a meeting, disrupting a meeting and a process. [38:00.040 --> 38:06.160] So basically, when I saw the magistrate this morning at 7.30 a.m. there in Liberty County [38:06.160 --> 38:14.800] jail, he issued me to $2,500 fines, which I think are in the excess of both of misdemeanors. [38:14.800 --> 38:19.280] And everything else, it was given a court time and everything else and got out at 7.38 [38:19.280 --> 38:24.920] o'clock this morning and everything, and I called the bond company myself, that they [38:24.920 --> 38:29.400] only have foreign liberty right across the street from the police department, bonded [38:29.400 --> 38:34.840] myself out, called my buddy, told him, hey, come pick me up, he's an 80 hour drive back [38:34.840 --> 38:38.240] to where I was, come and pick me up and drove me home. [38:38.240 --> 38:40.560] But basically, that's about it. [38:40.560 --> 38:49.800] So I go back to court now on October the 11th of this year, 2017, and have to face the two [38:49.800 --> 38:53.920] charges and everything and see what's going to happen on that. [38:53.920 --> 38:58.280] So any advice I can give you? [38:58.280 --> 39:05.360] Now we bring Scott back in, okay, Scott, you're on this situation. [39:05.360 --> 39:06.360] Okay. [39:06.360 --> 39:15.520] Well, first thing you need to do is judicial conduct the judge, and if there's any, the [39:15.520 --> 39:21.120] district attorney, bar grieve him to the stone age, just start writing up about three or [39:21.120 --> 39:29.720] four or five bar grievances and send one every other day to wake him up, and then go ahead [39:29.720 --> 39:39.560] and file a lawsuit against the cop for aggravated assault and start bringing him around, tea [39:39.560 --> 39:45.640] close that cop, and write up you about three or four criminal complaints and send those [39:45.640 --> 39:48.760] in so you can get those cops on tea close. [39:48.760 --> 39:54.280] Then go ahead and do your information request and get that stuff going so that they have [39:54.280 --> 40:01.560] 15 days to answer that, and then start sticking in all the paperwork off the website and start [40:01.560 --> 40:07.280] jamming them up on that, and then that way you start getting a paper fireball rolling [40:07.280 --> 40:14.920] on them and then go in there and just, that's how you kind of get them started to get going [40:14.920 --> 40:15.920] on them. [40:15.920 --> 40:21.720] You definitely want to tea close those cops and for aggravated assault and everything [40:21.720 --> 40:30.040] like that, so that you have that, and then that's going to be your first salvo to start [40:30.040 --> 40:36.240] doing that, and then for sure when you got to go to court, make sure you take at least [40:36.240 --> 40:42.680] one court watcher with you so as soon as they violate anything like that, the court watcher [40:42.680 --> 40:50.480] can write up a third party complaint and start using that to judicial conduct the judge, [40:50.480 --> 40:57.360] and also that third party witness, if he witnesses the judge doing anything out of bounds, which [40:57.360 --> 41:03.880] they generally always do, then he can go ahead and follow a lawsuit against the judge. [41:03.880 --> 41:11.760] I just wrote up a lawsuit for, well it's a tort letter for a judge in Pope County for [41:11.760 --> 41:21.920] a boy named Jody that was denied an examining trial, and I went to court as the court watcher [41:21.920 --> 41:27.280] and Jody asked him how come he was denied an examining trial, and the judge stated in [41:27.280 --> 41:33.680] open court that the case was not a felony, therefore he was denied an examining trial. [41:33.680 --> 41:40.840] That is my lawsuit that I'm taking that he violated statutory requirements to give him [41:40.840 --> 41:46.960] a mandatory examining trial, so that's going to be another salvo that I shoot over into [41:46.960 --> 41:49.440] Pope County and get them woke up. [41:49.440 --> 41:59.440] I've already done a 202 motion to depose the court clerk from what I understand that court [41:59.440 --> 42:03.000] clerk is no longer working at Pope County anymore. [42:03.000 --> 42:04.000] She quit. [42:04.000 --> 42:05.000] She took off. [42:05.000 --> 42:07.000] She didn't want to be no longer in it. [42:07.000 --> 42:13.360] I'm glad to hear that, my partner that's with me, James Barton, is also listening in [42:13.360 --> 42:15.360] on this as well. [42:15.360 --> 42:21.800] He had some issues in Pope County, as well did my sister, and I've got her set up already [42:21.800 --> 42:26.960] on a civil lawsuit against Sergeant Vasquez from the Pope County Police Department, as [42:26.960 --> 42:31.840] well as the Pope County Clerk, because in my opinion, when I got the paperwork from [42:31.840 --> 42:38.560] my sister, the clerk that you're talking about, I believe that she had her hands, she must [42:38.560 --> 42:47.320] have had her hands, on the district attorney's stamp still, as well as the prosecutors and [42:47.320 --> 42:49.800] as well as a state representative. [42:49.800 --> 42:54.680] I've never seen any paperwork go through on a class D misdemeanor where a state representative [42:54.680 --> 43:00.360] had to put their state still and their signature on something as far as a class D misdemeanor [43:00.360 --> 43:03.400] and everything else, but it kind of baffled me all the way. [43:03.400 --> 43:08.560] They railroaded my sister, and I've been working on some stuff with her on that as well, so [43:08.560 --> 43:10.600] I know plenty much about Pope County. [43:10.600 --> 43:13.040] They are pretty well, pretty well, Jack. [43:13.040 --> 43:21.080] They did have one judge that actually was found guilty of texting the jurors as far [43:21.080 --> 43:27.000] as that, and going back to the juror's deliberation room and telling the jurors on how to deliberate, [43:27.000 --> 43:31.800] and she had to step down and everything else, so she's no longer allowed to be a judge, [43:31.800 --> 43:34.360] so I do know quite a bit about Pope County, but... [43:34.360 --> 43:35.360] Okay. [43:35.360 --> 43:36.360] Hang on, James. [43:36.360 --> 43:37.360] We're about to go to break. [43:37.360 --> 43:42.640] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Steven, Reelval Radio, and James, if you're out there, give [43:42.640 --> 43:51.120] us a call on 512-646-1984, and we'll bring you in on your associated issue. [43:51.120 --> 43:58.120] This is Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens, Reelval Radio, and we'll be right back. [44:51.120 --> 44:58.120] Thanks for watching, and remember, every $25 donation is a chance to win. [44:58.120 --> 45:15.120] Go to LogosRadioNetwork.com for details and donate today. [45:15.120 --> 45:23.120] If you have a lawyer, know what your lawyer should be doing. [45:23.120 --> 45:28.120] If you don't have a lawyer, know what you should do for yourself. [45:28.120 --> 45:31.120] Thousands have won with our step-by-step course, and now you can too. [45:31.120 --> 45:35.120] Jurisdictionary was created by a licensed attorney with 22 years of case-winning experience. [45:35.120 --> 45:39.120] Even if you're not in a lawsuit, you can learn what everyone should understand about the [45:39.120 --> 45:43.120] principles and practices that control our American courts. [45:43.120 --> 45:50.120] You'll receive our audio classroom, video seminar, tutorials, forms for civil cases, [45:50.120 --> 45:53.120] prosay tactics, and much more. [45:53.120 --> 45:57.120] Please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the banner. [45:57.120 --> 46:14.120] It's toll-free, 866-LAW-EZ. [46:14.120 --> 46:31.120] If you could not have any problems, where do you want to look for one? [46:31.120 --> 46:51.120] If you could not have any problems, where do you want to look for one? [46:51.120 --> 47:01.120] If you could not have any problems, where do you want to look for one? [47:01.120 --> 47:11.120] If you could not have any problems, where do you want to look for one? [47:11.120 --> 47:39.120] If you could not have any problems, where do you want to look for one? [47:39.120 --> 47:43.120] Okay, we are back. [47:43.120 --> 47:47.120] We're going to finish up with James and Scott on this segment. [47:47.120 --> 47:50.120] We've got three callers who want to be able to get to them in the next hour. [47:50.120 --> 47:59.120] Okay, the reason I wanted to bring the both of you together is James is just starting out here. [47:59.120 --> 48:09.120] Scott, when you started out, you were pretty concerned and actually your issues were as serious as James [48:09.120 --> 48:12.120] as you were charged with the Class B misdemeanor. [48:12.120 --> 48:17.120] You were looking at jail time, but you took them on anyway. [48:17.120 --> 48:25.120] Kind of explain how you felt about that, Scott, and how it worked out in the end. [48:25.120 --> 48:32.120] Well, at first, especially when you're green, you're really nervous. [48:32.120 --> 48:41.120] The main reason is because you really don't know what your rights are and what their limitations are. [48:41.120 --> 48:50.120] When you're confused like that, it makes it really hard for you to figure out how to go about attacking these people, [48:50.120 --> 48:53.120] especially defending your rights. [48:53.120 --> 48:58.120] You really have that learning curve to go through. [48:58.120 --> 49:05.120] It can be quite daunting because when you first start out and you start writing paperwork, [49:05.120 --> 49:10.120] I remember when I first was writing paperwork and I'd give it to you and you'd throw it back [49:10.120 --> 49:15.120] and it would be just total trash and I would be even a little bit more discouraged, [49:15.120 --> 49:22.120] but instead of just throwing up my hands and just giving up, I just got madder and dug in my heels harder. [49:22.120 --> 49:28.120] So by doing that, I had to do a lot of reading and a lot of writing. [49:28.120 --> 49:40.120] Well, that paid off tremendously not to say that I won each case because typically most of the cases I was still found guilty on, [49:40.120 --> 49:48.120] but it really changed the dynamics of the court because at first they were just railroading me, [49:48.120 --> 49:57.120] telling me this and telling me that and I didn't really know that they were violating the law six ways from Sunday. [49:57.120 --> 50:06.120] And then after I started seeing how things were run as opposed to how they were supposed to be ran, [50:06.120 --> 50:10.120] then it really infuriated me even more. [50:10.120 --> 50:19.120] But the thing is, like this Addison judge, when he first denied me my rights to speak and did all that [50:19.120 --> 50:28.120] and just really gave me the good old fashioned railroading, it really made me mad. [50:28.120 --> 50:36.120] But after I started following judicial conducts and even seeing if I could get him indicted with a grand jury, [50:36.120 --> 50:43.120] the next time I went before that guy, his whole attitude changed towards me. [50:43.120 --> 50:49.120] It was no longer shouting, hollering, doing all that, being real belligerent. [50:49.120 --> 50:54.120] That guy slipped back in his chair and kept his mouth shut. [50:54.120 --> 50:57.120] And that was a huge, huge turnaround. [50:57.120 --> 51:06.120] So from that point forward, every time I got into one of these courtrooms and saw that they were going sideways on me, [51:06.120 --> 51:12.120] I immediately got out of there and started following judicial conducts on these guys, [51:12.120 --> 51:18.120] far grieving these attorneys to the stone age, just following paper after paper after paper. [51:18.120 --> 51:26.120] It made a huge difference because their attitude towards me changed 180 degrees. [51:26.120 --> 51:31.120] They realized all of a sudden, this guy's not just going to lay down and roll over. [51:31.120 --> 51:34.120] He's going to fight tooth and nail. [51:34.120 --> 51:41.120] And by the time I got done with Rockwall over there, they were trying to give me the good old fashioned railroad in the beginning. [51:41.120 --> 51:48.120] But by the end of it, they were really paying real close attention to what they said and what they did. [51:48.120 --> 51:51.120] And that was a huge, huge turnaround. [51:51.120 --> 52:01.120] In fact, in that Rockwall one, the judge said, all my fines, fees, everything was waived, just get out of my courtroom. [52:01.120 --> 52:04.120] He didn't want to see me no more. [52:04.120 --> 52:07.120] And that was a huge turnaround. [52:07.120 --> 52:17.120] And that's what I'm telling people that you have to stand up and bow up to these people and let them know you're not going to be pushed around like this. [52:17.120 --> 52:26.120] Now, they may get their way in court that day, but the next day, the paperwork goes a-flying. [52:26.120 --> 52:32.120] And now they have to answer because not only that, every time you start doing that, that's raising their bond ratings. [52:32.120 --> 52:35.120] Now, here is one other good thing. [52:35.120 --> 52:43.120] After following all that paperwork over in Rockwall, the next guy that came behind me, who I was kind of helping out a little bit, [52:43.120 --> 52:50.120] he got all the information off the traffic ticket dot website and went over and shoved it in the courtroom. [52:50.120 --> 52:53.120] Well, he had emotions hearing. [52:53.120 --> 53:03.120] He went into that emotions hearing and the court clerk said, anybody that does not have a case here, please raise your hand. [53:03.120 --> 53:12.120] Now, you got to remember, these are the same people that tried kicking everybody out of court when I was there one day saying you couldn't be in here. [53:12.120 --> 53:14.120] That made me mad. [53:14.120 --> 53:17.120] I said, no, everybody has a right to be in this courtroom. [53:17.120 --> 53:31.120] Well, as soon as we left out of court that day, I filed judicial conducts on the judge because he basically accused him of ordering people to leave the courtroom when it's a free open access courtroom. [53:31.120 --> 53:43.120] Well, now when this guy went in and shoved his paperwork in, the court clerk asked, supposedly we're real polite about it, but say anybody that doesn't have a court case here, please raise your hand. [53:43.120 --> 53:53.120] Only one person raised his hand and it was a city council member saying he was here to watch what was going on. [53:53.120 --> 53:59.120] They didn't even know it was a city council member in there observing the proceedings. [53:59.120 --> 54:03.120] Now, don't you think that sent some shock waves through the court? [54:03.120 --> 54:05.120] I bet you it did. [54:05.120 --> 54:07.120] Yes, sir, I do. [54:07.120 --> 54:09.120] Now, that's one thing that's got me concerned. [54:09.120 --> 54:17.120] I believe the failure to identify is just a class A misdemeanor, but it's just disrupting a meeting or a procession. [54:17.120 --> 54:19.120] That's a class A misdemeanor. [54:19.120 --> 54:21.120] James, hold on. [54:21.120 --> 54:25.120] I don't know of any such crime. [54:25.120 --> 54:27.120] Never heard of it. [54:27.120 --> 54:33.120] That's exactly what they've got to say here as you are charged with the misdemeanor offenses. [54:33.120 --> 54:39.120] James, it doesn't matter what they said. [54:39.120 --> 54:41.120] You were in a courtroom. [54:41.120 --> 54:43.120] You were not in a meeting. [54:43.120 --> 54:47.120] And the officers had no control over that courtroom. [54:47.120 --> 54:49.120] The judge did. [54:49.120 --> 54:55.120] You cannot disrupt a courtroom. [54:55.120 --> 55:03.120] You cannot disrupt a courtroom. [55:03.120 --> 55:05.120] Hello? [55:05.120 --> 55:15.120] The file is compliant. [55:15.120 --> 55:17.120] James, are you there? [55:17.120 --> 55:19.120] Yeah. [55:19.120 --> 55:21.120] It's cutting out. [55:21.120 --> 55:23.120] It's not me. It's the internet in between me. [55:23.120 --> 55:25.120] Okay. [55:25.120 --> 55:29.120] If you were in a courtroom, that is not a meeting. [55:29.120 --> 55:31.120] That's a court hearing. [55:31.120 --> 55:35.120] And disrupting a meeting does not apply. [55:35.120 --> 55:37.120] In a court hearing, you cannot disrupt a meeting. [55:37.120 --> 55:41.120] You can commit contempt of court. [55:41.120 --> 55:47.120] So in contempt of court, the court itself, the judge runs the hearing. [55:47.120 --> 55:51.120] If the judge charges you, you're charged, but only he can do that. [55:51.120 --> 55:57.120] So you want to know who filed this complaint. [55:57.120 --> 55:59.120] Okay. [55:59.120 --> 56:01.120] That will get interesting. [56:01.120 --> 56:07.120] If someone other than the judge did it, then in any case you file criminally against the judge, [56:07.120 --> 56:13.120] because you can't be charged with contempt of court unless you have been given. [56:13.120 --> 56:15.120] Notice an opportunity. [56:15.120 --> 56:23.120] Notice behavior is unacceptable and opportunity to cease. [56:23.120 --> 56:25.120] Right. [56:25.120 --> 56:29.120] On this paperwork I have in front of me, Randy, it says Arrangement Notice, [56:29.120 --> 56:33.120] County Court of Law, Liberty County, Texas, Judge Thomas A. Chambers, [56:33.120 --> 56:37.120] which is a completely different judge than what it was in Dayton. [56:37.120 --> 56:39.120] Then it's got the defendant's name. [56:39.120 --> 56:41.120] It's got the date of the arrest. [56:41.120 --> 56:43.120] Hold on. [56:43.120 --> 56:49.120] You said this was charged as a Class C misdemeanor. [56:49.120 --> 56:55.120] I'm assuming that the failure to identify as a Class A, and then I'm assuming that the deal, [56:55.120 --> 57:01.120] I did see somewhere that the disrupting meeting and process and procession was a Class B misdemeanor [57:01.120 --> 57:03.120] somewhere on one of these paperworks. [57:03.120 --> 57:07.120] Here's the deal with a Class C misdemeanor. [57:07.120 --> 57:17.120] In 6.01, Texas Code of Criminal Procedure says an arraignment may be held in the matter of a felony [57:17.120 --> 57:23.120] or a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment. [57:23.120 --> 57:35.120] So if the charge turns out to be a Class C misdemeanor, then you file abusive process against the judge. [57:35.120 --> 57:41.120] This is about taking them to task on their own code. [57:41.120 --> 57:43.120] You were in a court. [57:43.120 --> 57:47.120] You weren't in a meeting. [57:47.120 --> 57:55.120] These are bailiffs trying to shift their weight around, trying to show how bad they are, [57:55.120 --> 57:59.120] and trying to show out for the judge. [57:59.120 --> 58:05.120] Now, they've done what they do, now it's your turn, and this is why I wanted you on with Scott. [58:05.120 --> 58:11.120] And we'll talk about this off the air and audit this case, and you'll be surprised how many criminal charges [58:11.120 --> 58:15.120] you'll have to file against them. [58:15.120 --> 58:19.120] James, let's call back in tomorrow night. [58:19.120 --> 58:22.120] We'll do a four-hour show. We'll have more time. [58:22.120 --> 58:26.120] I've got three callers who've been on quite a while and want to get to them. [58:26.120 --> 58:33.120] Thank you, Scott. If you have more, both of you come on tomorrow night and we'll give you more time. [58:33.120 --> 58:36.120] Okay, we're about to go to break. Randy Kelton, Reel of Law Radio. [58:36.120 --> 58:42.120] Randy Kelton, David Stevens, Reel of Law Radio, or call in number 512-646-1984. [58:42.120 --> 58:50.120] We'll be right back. [58:50.120 --> 58:58.120] The Bible remains the most popular book in the world, yet countless readers are frustrated because they struggle to understand it. [58:58.120 --> 59:06.120] Some new translations try to help by simplifying the text, but in the process can compromise the profound meaning of the Scripture. [59:06.120 --> 59:09.120] Enter the recovery version. [59:09.120 --> 59:18.120] First, this new translation is extremely faithful and accurate, but the real story is the more than 9,000 explanatory footnotes. [59:18.120 --> 59:28.120] Difficult and profound passages are opened up in a marvelous way, providing an entrance into the riches of the Word beyond which you've ever experienced before. [59:28.120 --> 59:33.120] Bibles for America would like to give you a free recovery version simply for the asking. [59:33.120 --> 59:48.120] This comprehensive yet compact study Bible is yours just by calling us toll free at 1-888-551-0102 or by ordering online at freestudybible.com. [59:48.120 --> 59:53.120] That's freestudybible.com. [59:53.120 --> 01:00:03.120] If you're listening to the Logos Radio Network at LogosRadioNetwork.com. [01:00:03.120 --> 01:00:22.120] The following news flash is brought to you by The Low Star Lowdown, providing the daily bulletins for the commodities market, today in history, news updates, and the inside scoop into the tides of the alternative. [01:00:22.120 --> 01:00:46.120] Markets for Wednesday, the 20th of September, 2017, close with gold at $1,300.83 an ounce, silver $17.17 an ounce, Texas crude $49.48 a barrel, Bitcoin is about $3,961, and dash coin sits about $343 U.S. currency. [01:00:46.120 --> 01:01:06.120] Today in history, the year 2011, the United States military under direction of the Obama administration and its Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy, originally put into law during the Clinton administration, repealing Don't Ask, Don't Tell has allowed gay and lesbian men and women to serve openly in the military for the first time. [01:01:06.120 --> 01:01:23.120] In recent news, at least 225 people have been confirmed dead as a result of yesterday's 7.1 earthquake, which struck 34 miles southwest of the city of Puebla in Mexico, 32 years to the day after the city's infamous quake that struck in 1985, which killed as many as 10,000 people. [01:01:23.120 --> 01:01:32.120] The most recent quake less than two weeks after the magnitude 8.1 earthquake on the 7th of this month, the epicenter of which was about 60 miles off the coast of Chiapas. [01:01:32.120 --> 01:01:44.120] Civil protection officials at the scene of at least 44 different locations where clamps or partially classed buildings are in the city are reporting at least 50 people being rescued out of them who were still alive, along with many dead bodies as well. [01:01:44.120 --> 01:01:48.120] Many more people are thought to be trapped within the wreckage of these damaged buildings. [01:01:48.120 --> 01:01:52.120] Mexican officials are stating that at least 39 buildings have been entirely destroyed. [01:01:52.120 --> 01:02:02.120] Families fearing aftershocks have prepared to sleep on the streets in Mexico City. [01:02:02.120 --> 01:02:13.120] A 6.1 magnitude earthquake has just hit off the eastern coast of Japan about 200 miles from the Fukushima power plant that has been in critical condition since it was struck by a tsunami in March of 2011. [01:02:13.120 --> 01:02:20.120] The quake was about 10 kilometers into the Earth's crust and there has been no reports of damages as of yet and a tsunami warning has not been issued. [01:02:20.120 --> 01:02:32.120] This is the third large quake to strike in the last 24 hours after the disastrous one in Mexico and a smaller one in New Zealand. [01:02:32.120 --> 01:02:39.120] Astronomers have informed the public that in just this past week, three never before discovered asteroids were spotted after they flew by Earth. [01:02:39.120 --> 01:02:51.120] Of the three, the largest asteroid 2017 SQ2 was spotted in hindsight on Monday nearly four days after the warehouse-sized chunk of space rock skimmed by 125,000 miles above Earth. [01:02:51.120 --> 01:03:01.120] This was Rick Rodeo with your lowdown for September 20, 2017. [01:03:01.120 --> 01:03:25.120] Music playing [01:03:25.120 --> 01:03:36.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens, RealVal Radio, and we're going to Mark in Wisconsin. Mark, what have you been up to this week? [01:03:36.120 --> 01:03:42.120] Well, I'm a little disappointed in both of us, Randy. [01:03:42.120 --> 01:03:58.120] This year, last week, I called and had complained about how they filed some paperwork, called it a trial memorandum, and then had an affidavit that they had referred to as an affidavit of judgment. [01:03:58.120 --> 01:04:05.120] Well, what they were trying to do is backdoor a summary judgment. Okay, fine. [01:04:05.120 --> 01:04:14.120] Here's the thing. Get to hear from legal reform and such, and the people who also qualify as Patronuts, as Eddie Craig would say. [01:04:14.120 --> 01:04:23.120] They go ahead and say, an affidavit is considered true unless, you know, unless you say something. [01:04:23.120 --> 01:04:39.120] Well, apparently, case law is clear that you must make a motion to attack the affidavit before a summary judgment. If a summary judgment is made, the affidavit is locked in. [01:04:39.120 --> 01:04:46.120] So this guy put all this paperwork in five days before, and they tried locking it in. [01:04:46.120 --> 01:04:54.120] Well, I went ahead and looked at that, and when I found that, it was like, all right, that's nice to know that they were trying that. [01:04:54.120 --> 01:05:06.120] And I made sure then that besides responding, I'd finished responding to the trial memorandum with my own trial memorandum, and then I went ahead and attacked the affidavit. [01:05:06.120 --> 01:05:16.120] I made sure I got that paperwork in. Then did a little bit more searching, and also started down the path that you put me on. [01:05:16.120 --> 01:05:23.120] Bar grievances. And I went to Wisconsin's Bar Grievance and Lawyer's Witness. [01:05:23.120 --> 01:05:33.120] In Wisconsin, a lawyer should not access an advocate or trial where lawyers likely would be necessary witness unless the testimony relates to an uncontested issue. [01:05:33.120 --> 01:05:44.120] Now, you would hit on and correctly hit on that an issue in the affidavit was not a false and misleading statement of material fact. [01:05:44.120 --> 01:05:50.120] Well, a false and misleading statement of material fact that I can test, well, there we go. We hit one. [01:05:50.120 --> 01:05:54.120] Number two, testimony relates to nature and value of legal services. [01:05:54.120 --> 01:05:56.120] Okay, it can't matter. [01:05:56.120 --> 01:06:01.120] Three, disqualification of the lawyer would work of substantial hardship on the client. [01:06:01.120 --> 01:06:05.120] Well, wait a second. What's that word disqualification? [01:06:05.120 --> 01:06:10.120] So, we'll do a little more case law search on SCR 2303.7. [01:06:10.120 --> 01:06:16.120] And lo and behold, apparently you can ask for the lawyer to be disqualified. [01:06:16.120 --> 01:06:19.120] So, I put in a motion. [01:06:19.120 --> 01:06:32.120] Hold on. Hold on. You, does you refer to the client of the lawyer or the opposing party? [01:06:32.120 --> 01:06:38.120] All right. In which way did I say you? [01:06:38.120 --> 01:06:46.120] Because I'm looking at the text here and I don't see you. This may have been my paraphrasing. [01:06:46.120 --> 01:06:50.120] A lawyer cannot, a lawyer shall not act as an advocate at trial, [01:06:50.120 --> 01:06:55.120] which a lawyer is likely to be necessary witness unless the testimony relates to an uncontested issue. [01:06:55.120 --> 01:06:58.120] Testimony is in regard to legal services irrelevant. [01:06:58.120 --> 01:07:02.120] Disqualification of the lawyer would work a substantial hardship on the client. [01:07:02.120 --> 01:07:09.120] Well, in the case that this bank has almost a hundred billion in outstanding credit card debt, [01:07:09.120 --> 01:07:14.120] I don't think disqualifying the lawyer is going to work a substantial hardship. [01:07:14.120 --> 01:07:21.120] So, we're just left with testimony and since the key here is disqualification, [01:07:21.120 --> 01:07:25.120] what I did is put in a motion to disqualify the lawyer and his law firm. [01:07:25.120 --> 01:07:32.120] Since the affidavit explicitly called out the law firm is processes and computers. [01:07:32.120 --> 01:07:38.120] So, what's nice in the ABA comments, it explicitly says here, [01:07:38.120 --> 01:07:44.120] comment three, to protect the tribunal and as you have reminded us on occasion, [01:07:44.120 --> 01:07:48.120] tribunal is me, the judge, and the lawyer. [01:07:48.120 --> 01:07:54.120] Paragraph A, which is what I'm citing, prohibits a lawyer, [01:07:54.120 --> 01:08:02.120] which I'm saying is serving as an advocate and necessary witness except in the other things, the things cited. [01:08:02.120 --> 01:08:10.120] So, we have a prohibition here ultimately going towards the lawyer's behavior. [01:08:10.120 --> 01:08:13.120] So, file that paperwork. [01:08:13.120 --> 01:08:22.120] Then, for the ha-has, I wrote up almost filled out bar grievance against the lawyer [01:08:22.120 --> 01:08:29.120] for violating a lawyer's witness and asked the judge to finish filling it out and sign it. [01:08:29.120 --> 01:08:32.120] They filed that in the paperwork. [01:08:32.120 --> 01:08:38.120] Amazingly, the e-filings that I made, they've not been approved. [01:08:38.120 --> 01:08:41.120] And it's, you know, a few days. [01:08:41.120 --> 01:08:43.120] It's almost a week. [01:08:43.120 --> 01:08:46.120] And that's kind of long for the e-filing system. [01:08:46.120 --> 01:08:50.120] They typically don't bother with that in waiting a week. [01:08:50.120 --> 01:08:53.120] It usually goes faster. [01:08:53.120 --> 01:09:00.120] But I just wanted people to be aware that apparently, if you don't go ahead [01:09:00.120 --> 01:09:07.120] and challenge the sufficiency of the affidavit before a summary judgment, [01:09:07.120 --> 01:09:10.120] that gets locked in if you have a summary judgment hearing. [01:09:10.120 --> 01:09:16.120] Because the text here, case law, however, that motions must be timely made. [01:09:16.120 --> 01:09:19.120] In the case of summary judgment motions, the motions to strike should be made [01:09:19.120 --> 01:09:23.120] while the motion for summary judgment is pending before the court. [01:09:23.120 --> 01:09:26.120] So get that motion in early. [01:09:26.120 --> 01:09:34.120] And the article that I cited was found out of a law firm in South Carolina. [01:09:34.120 --> 01:09:38.120] I didn't use their case law for it. [01:09:38.120 --> 01:09:44.120] I went ahead and said, if they're saying federal case law and state case law is clear, [01:09:44.120 --> 01:09:49.120] I might as well just go with their conclusion. [01:09:49.120 --> 01:09:51.120] Okay, hold on. [01:09:51.120 --> 01:09:55.120] Any time a motion or pleading is filed with the court, [01:09:55.120 --> 01:10:02.120] the court is going to have a set time in which you have to respond to that motion or pleading. [01:10:02.120 --> 01:10:07.120] So if you have an opposition to an affidavit, [01:10:07.120 --> 01:10:14.120] an affidavit will have to be filed in conjunction with some other action. [01:10:14.120 --> 01:10:22.120] An affidavit can't be effectively just simply filed in the court because it would lack a foundation. [01:10:22.120 --> 01:10:25.120] If you're going to challenge the affidavit, [01:10:25.120 --> 01:10:34.120] you have to do it within the time allotted to challenge the motion or pleading with which it is. [01:10:34.120 --> 01:10:39.120] Well, that would be the collateral attack after the fact. [01:10:39.120 --> 01:10:43.120] But, I mean, this one pleading was five days before, [01:10:43.120 --> 01:10:45.120] and they were going to try and railroad this. [01:10:45.120 --> 01:10:51.120] And I was able to get it stopped, stop the railroad. [01:10:51.120 --> 01:10:56.120] But that's, yes, you're right, you have a certain number of days. [01:10:56.120 --> 01:10:59.120] And again, this guy was trying to backdoor the stuff. [01:10:59.120 --> 01:11:06.120] What's real interesting is the lawyer was winding to the circuit court commissioner [01:11:06.120 --> 01:11:15.120] who was acting, we'll call him a judge because that's what his little placard says on this, where he sits. [01:11:15.120 --> 01:11:21.120] He was complaining that how is this guy getting these motions filed with the court? [01:11:21.120 --> 01:11:30.120] And any circuit court commissioner said, I don't know how he's getting motions filed with the court. [01:11:30.120 --> 01:11:36.120] And I wanted to just confirm that the whole idea, if you want to have an appeal, [01:11:36.120 --> 01:11:41.120] is you have to put something before a judge and get a judge to make a decision. [01:11:41.120 --> 01:11:49.120] And how you go ahead and get a judge to make a decision is you ask in a motion, judge, make a decision. [01:11:49.120 --> 01:11:51.120] Are you missing something there? [01:11:51.120 --> 01:11:53.120] Yeah, it goes to prayer. [01:11:53.120 --> 01:11:57.120] If you don't have a prayer, you don't have a prayer. [01:11:57.120 --> 01:12:01.120] Right. I therefore ask for this. [01:12:01.120 --> 01:12:04.120] Okay. [01:12:04.120 --> 01:12:10.120] Yeah, we had a guy, I had a guy bring me a case where a credit card company was suing him. [01:12:10.120 --> 01:12:14.120] And I read the case over and I told him, he said, what do you think? [01:12:14.120 --> 01:12:16.120] I said, they don't have a prayer. [01:12:16.120 --> 01:12:19.120] He said, why not? I don't know. They don't have one. [01:12:19.120 --> 01:12:29.120] If you file a motion, you have to specifically ask the court to give you a specific ruling. [01:12:29.120 --> 01:12:33.120] And that's called prayer. They didn't have one. [01:12:33.120 --> 01:12:44.120] They just spent 10 pages telling the court what a deadbeat this guy was that never asked the court to do anything. [01:12:44.120 --> 01:12:53.120] So Mr. Graves mentioned that in his show back when he was near radio network. [01:12:53.120 --> 01:13:00.120] So he didn't complain. The attorney wasn't apparently complaining about a lack of prayers in my documents. [01:13:00.120 --> 01:13:04.120] Just the fact that I was filing documents apparently was upsetting this guy. [01:13:04.120 --> 01:13:20.120] But apparently he was spent a lot more time drunkers the bottom of the law class than I have because every move he's went has went to try to get a default judgment and win procedurally. [01:13:20.120 --> 01:13:28.120] And apparently he's not worth used to people coming back out swinging. [01:13:28.120 --> 01:13:38.120] But again, for the listeners, attacking the affidavit, there's a timeliness to it. [01:13:38.120 --> 01:13:48.120] Something here didn't make sense. The guy filed a summary judgment motion and asked for hearing within five days. [01:13:48.120 --> 01:13:50.120] Yeah. [01:13:50.120 --> 01:14:01.120] The affidavit and then asked for summary judgment within five days. Well, how did he file the affidavit if it wasn't filed in conjunction with a motion appealing? [01:14:01.120 --> 01:14:10.120] He called it a trial memorandum and I called out and I said, I don't know what this trial memorandum thing is. [01:14:10.120 --> 01:14:15.120] But apparently that's what we're going to do. So fine. Here's my trial memorandum. [01:14:15.120 --> 01:14:24.120] He doesn't show up for motion hearings. It strikes me as if he's trying to get a summary judgment. He should be making a motion and intending the motion hearing. [01:14:24.120 --> 01:14:33.120] So I don't know what he's trying to pull here. So I called him out right at the very beginning of my trial memorandum. [01:14:33.120 --> 01:14:47.120] But yeah, he was making a motion and trying to backdoor it using the older language because apparently trial memorandum is old language for a summary judgment. [01:14:47.120 --> 01:14:54.120] Interesting. So that was archaic language and he's just trying to trick the dumb pro se. [01:14:54.120 --> 01:15:08.120] Yep. And of course the circuit court, whatever. I remember his name right now. I gave his title earlier. [01:15:08.120 --> 01:15:18.120] Anyway, he was trying to trick him but he's going to get judicial conduct complained and since I didn't, I put in the judge should sign this. [01:15:18.120 --> 01:15:28.120] I want to take on the circuit court guy through my bar grievance for not going ahead and complaining about an attorney when he is in error. [01:15:28.120 --> 01:15:39.120] So it'll be fun. It'll be a good time. Mark, you're having way too much fun. Okay. Do you have anything else for us? [01:15:39.120 --> 01:15:52.120] No. No, I think, again, the landmine for the fellow listeners of challenging the affidavit. I sent you separately an email. [01:15:52.120 --> 01:16:04.120] It appears on the language that they're using in the statutes in Wisconsin. These guys aren't even putting the proper paperwork together and getting default judgments. [01:16:04.120 --> 01:16:21.120] And if I'm right, Randy, do you think I should then just go ahead and start any of the circuit court judges who are circuit court commissioners who make a decision on a default judgment? [01:16:21.120 --> 01:16:29.120] Since it says no default shall be entered, should I just go ahead and judicial conduct complain to every one of the circuit court judges who's approved that? [01:16:29.120 --> 01:16:31.120] Absolutely. [01:16:31.120 --> 01:16:37.120] All right. Okay. Hang on. We're about to go to break. Do you have anything else, Mark? [01:16:37.120 --> 01:16:49.120] No. No, I think I've done enough damage for the evening. Thank you very much. And confirming that that guy's off base with his policy final motions. [01:16:49.120 --> 01:17:00.120] Okay. Thank you, Mark. You are having too much fun. This is Randy Kelton, Debra Stevens with my radio. We'll be right back. 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[01:17:41.120 --> 01:17:49.120] For more information, please visit ruleoflawradio.com and click on the blue Michael Merris banner or email Michael Merris at yahoo.com. [01:17:49.120 --> 01:18:00.120] That's ruleoflawradio.com or email m-i-c-h-a-e-l-m-i-r-r-a-s at yahoo.com to learn how to stop debt collectors now. [01:18:00.120 --> 01:18:07.120] I love logos. Without the shows on this network, I'd be almost as ignorant as my friends. I'm so addicted to the truth now that there's no going back. [01:18:07.120 --> 01:18:13.120] I need my truth fix. I'd be lost without logos, and I really want to help keep this network on the air. [01:18:13.120 --> 01:18:20.120] I'd love to volunteer as a show producer, but I'm a bit of a Luddite, and I really don't have any money to give because I spent it all on supplements. [01:18:20.120 --> 01:18:22.120] How can I help logos? [01:18:22.120 --> 01:18:27.120] Well, I'm glad you asked. Whenever you order anything from Amazon, you can help logos. [01:18:27.120 --> 01:18:31.120] You can order them in your supplies or holiday gifts. First thing you do is clear your cookies. [01:18:31.120 --> 01:18:37.120] Now, go to LogosRadioNetwork.com. Click on the Amazon logo and bookmark it. [01:18:37.120 --> 01:18:43.120] Now, when you order anything from Amazon, you use that link and Logos gets a few pesos. [01:18:43.120 --> 01:18:44.120] Do I pay extra? [01:18:44.120 --> 01:18:45.120] No. [01:18:45.120 --> 01:18:47.120] Do you have to do anything different when I order? [01:18:47.120 --> 01:18:48.120] No. [01:18:48.120 --> 01:18:49.120] Can I use my Amazon Prime? [01:18:49.120 --> 01:18:51.120] No. I mean, yes. [01:18:51.120 --> 01:18:57.120] Wow, giving without doing anything or spending any money, this is perfect. Thank you so much. [01:18:57.120 --> 01:18:58.120] We are Logos. [01:18:58.120 --> 01:19:11.120] Happy Holidays, Logos! [01:19:11.120 --> 01:19:40.120] Okay, we are back. Randy Kelkin, Deborah Stevens, with our radio, and we're going to Artique in California. Hello, Artique. [01:19:40.120 --> 01:19:42.120] Hey, how are you doing? [01:19:42.120 --> 01:19:45.120] Yeah, did I pronounce that right? [01:19:45.120 --> 01:19:48.120] I can't hear you. What's that again? [01:19:48.120 --> 01:19:50.120] Did I pronounce that right? [01:19:50.120 --> 01:19:55.120] Oh, you pronounced it perfect. You're the first person in a long time to not mess that up. [01:19:55.120 --> 01:19:57.120] Good job. [01:19:57.120 --> 01:20:02.120] Okay, and you're a first-time caller, so what do you have for us tonight? [01:20:02.120 --> 01:20:15.120] Well, I mean, I was surprised when I came across your YouTube videos on the road, not on the road, about, you know, the higher-patrol local police department, just, you know, harassing people. [01:20:15.120 --> 01:20:26.120] And I became a victim of that. And I saw what you do and stuff. I just wanted to know a little more about how you program works and stuff. [01:20:26.120 --> 01:20:35.120] You know, I've done a lot of research on my stuff, on the laws, but I just wanted to get to know more about your program. [01:20:35.120 --> 01:20:39.120] Okay, I missed the last part of that. [01:20:39.120 --> 01:20:48.120] I just said, you know, I've watched your videos and stuff, and I researched about, you know, the laws and stuff, but I was wondering about it. [01:20:48.120 --> 01:20:57.120] Yeah, I'm Randy. I'm Randy Craig. I'm Randy. Eddie Craig is on Monday nights. [01:20:57.120 --> 01:21:00.120] Oh, he's on Monday nights? Oh, good. [01:21:00.120 --> 01:21:05.120] Yeah, Eddie Craig is the chomp, and I'm the last guy. [01:21:05.120 --> 01:21:09.120] Now, Eddie Craig calls me the chomp and says he's the last guy. [01:21:09.120 --> 01:21:15.120] But what the heck? Yeah, Eddie Craig primarily does traffic. [01:21:15.120 --> 01:21:22.120] Some traffic, but I do other areas of law as well. [01:21:22.120 --> 01:21:33.120] Yeah, I actually got you. I mean, you guys are all doing good things for the people, you know? So, in my book, you guys are all good. Nobody chomps. [01:21:33.120 --> 01:21:39.120] Yeah, but you can't expect me to say anything nice about Eddie, just for yucks. [01:21:39.120 --> 01:21:45.120] Yeah, we pick on each other all the time, but Eddie is really good with the traffic side. [01:21:45.120 --> 01:21:49.120] I do have a website for traffic. [01:21:49.120 --> 01:22:01.120] So if you had to get a ticket or something, you can go to the trafficticket.website and put in your ticket information, and I'll send you a bunch of documentation that you can file in the court, [01:22:01.120 --> 01:22:05.120] primarily for its annoyance value. [01:22:05.120 --> 01:22:18.120] Courts never follow law anyway, so we demand that they follow law, and then when they don't, we have things we can do to beat them up. [01:22:18.120 --> 01:22:20.120] Yeah, okay. [01:22:20.120 --> 01:22:25.120] Traffic enforcement is not about law, it's all about money. [01:22:25.120 --> 01:22:35.120] Why is it all about revenue then? I mean, that's what I've come to realize, and, you know, it's just like, to me, it's like a devil on the road, you know? [01:22:35.120 --> 01:22:45.120] It's just not right, because, you know, because every time those blue and red lights are behind you, you feel at unease. It's not a good feeling, you know? [01:22:45.120 --> 01:22:55.120] When a police officer writes you a citation, that puts a permanent mark on your record. [01:22:55.120 --> 01:23:12.120] So one of our strategies is that we look for the licensing agency that certifies the police officer, and we file a complaint against the officer with that licensing agency. [01:23:12.120 --> 01:23:17.120] That puts a permanent mark on his chart. [01:23:17.120 --> 01:23:20.120] Wow, nice way to get back there. [01:23:20.120 --> 01:23:24.120] Oh, it makes them so unhappy. [01:23:24.120 --> 01:23:32.120] At the end of the day, we always say you'll never win your case simply because you have the law and the facts on your side. [01:23:32.120 --> 01:23:38.120] It is not that way now, never has been that way since we've had human beings as judges. [01:23:38.120 --> 01:23:47.120] You win your case if you have the politics on your side. So on my show, we talk about politics. [01:23:47.120 --> 01:24:00.120] Now, if you file a professional conduct complaint against the police officer, it won't affect the ticket at all, but it will really affect that police officer. [01:24:00.120 --> 01:24:14.120] He's going to go ballistic because if he gets six of those, the insurance company that insures all the policemen for the department he works for will want to raise their bond rating. [01:24:14.120 --> 01:24:22.120] They want to raise the insurance rate on all their policemen, unless they fire this guy. [01:24:22.120 --> 01:24:31.120] And if they fire him, nobody else will hire him. So for the policemen, that is a really big deal. [01:24:31.120 --> 01:24:37.120] So that's the first thing. Are you going to put a mark on my chart? Well, I'll put one on your chart. See how that works for you. [01:24:37.120 --> 01:24:41.120] A lawyer, he filed a bar grievance against him. [01:24:41.120 --> 01:24:53.120] If you're a lawyer and you get a bar grievance your first year of practice, your malpractice insurance that starts at around $25,000, they will cancel immediately. [01:24:53.120 --> 01:25:00.120] Two bar grievances, any one year of practice, they cancel. Three, they cancel your law firm's malpractice insurance. [01:25:00.120 --> 01:25:11.120] And once a lawyer gets four or five bar grievances on his record, no law firm in the country will touch him with a 10 foot pole. [01:25:11.120 --> 01:25:15.120] It severely damages his career. [01:25:15.120 --> 01:25:23.120] So you want to come and beat me up, Bubba? I'll introduce you to some politics. [01:25:23.120 --> 01:25:33.120] Judges, judicial conduct complaints against the judges. Now none of these have anything to do with the law or the adjudication of your case. [01:25:33.120 --> 01:25:37.120] But it makes them crazy. [01:25:37.120 --> 01:25:48.120] And if we're going to get them to start following law and doing things right, they got to give us a reason not to file professional conduct complaints against them. Does that make sense? [01:25:48.120 --> 01:25:53.120] Yeah, it does. It makes sense how that works. [01:25:53.120 --> 01:25:59.120] Like I said, you know, I've done a lot of research in myself, but the law is itself, but you can tell me about that bond. [01:25:59.120 --> 01:26:03.120] Yes, I have heard that policemen have bonds, but yes, I do know that. [01:26:03.120 --> 01:26:08.120] Okay, bond literally means insurance. [01:26:08.120 --> 01:26:09.120] Yes. [01:26:09.120 --> 01:26:14.120] Where the policeman has a bond, the policeman himself doesn't really have a bond. [01:26:14.120 --> 01:26:20.120] The agency he works for has a bond. [01:26:20.120 --> 01:26:28.120] The policeman comes under that bond, but it is an insurance policy after all. [01:26:28.120 --> 01:26:43.120] And it is the job of the insurance agent or adjuster to charge as much to his client as possible and then get out of paying any claim that he can. [01:26:43.120 --> 01:26:53.120] So you've got an insurance adjuster out there who's just looking for a reason to up the premium on his client. [01:26:53.120 --> 01:27:01.120] His primary reason are professional conduct complaints. That's how they get their shot at him. [01:27:01.120 --> 01:27:09.120] So they use tricks and connivances to force us to pay their tickets. [01:27:09.120 --> 01:27:15.120] They can use tricks and connivances to give them reason not to write us tickets. [01:27:15.120 --> 01:27:19.120] And that's my story and I'm sticking to it. [01:27:19.120 --> 01:27:20.120] That's great. [01:27:20.120 --> 01:27:22.120] Yesterday I've not heard the best part. [01:27:22.120 --> 01:27:29.120] Everything I was here is you go to court and you use these motions and you do the transportation code. [01:27:29.120 --> 01:27:30.120] I don't know. [01:27:30.120 --> 01:27:31.120] There's so much stuff out there. [01:27:31.120 --> 01:27:34.120] I don't even know what to believe, but okay. [01:27:34.120 --> 01:27:35.120] That's interesting. [01:27:35.120 --> 01:27:40.120] Okay. I have a driver's license. [01:27:40.120 --> 01:27:46.120] There are some people want to fight the right not to have a driver's license. [01:27:46.120 --> 01:27:49.120] That's not a fight I want to have. [01:27:49.120 --> 01:28:00.120] My fight is with public officials who do not follow the code exactly as it's written. [01:28:00.120 --> 01:28:12.120] So while I have the qualification to operate in commerce, if I want to, I never do. [01:28:12.120 --> 01:28:24.120] So my argument to the court is that while I can operate in commerce, if I want to, at the time they all spool me over and wrote me this citation. [01:28:24.120 --> 01:28:31.120] I was not operating in commerce or more specifically, I don't really make that argument. [01:28:31.120 --> 01:28:48.120] The argument I make is, is that the citation itself does not articulate the elements necessary to bring me within the scope of the statutory scheme. [01:28:48.120 --> 01:28:57.120] And that requires evidence to show that I was acting in commerce and that evidence is not included in the citation. [01:28:57.120 --> 01:29:03.120] Therefore, the citation is insufficient to invoke the subject manager jurisdiction of the court. [01:29:03.120 --> 01:29:13.120] Now that takes their rules and crams them right down their throats. [01:29:13.120 --> 01:29:15.120] Does that make sense? [01:29:15.120 --> 01:29:21.120] Yeah, that doesn't make sense. You could repeat that. I want to write something like that down. Can you say that one more time? [01:29:21.120 --> 01:29:24.120] Okay, let me say that one more time. [01:29:24.120 --> 01:29:34.120] While I have the authority to operate in commerce, I operate in commerce. [01:29:34.120 --> 01:29:39.120] I'm like a truck driver who goes to a warehouse and drops off a load. [01:29:39.120 --> 01:29:46.120] But he doesn't have another load there. He has to drive across town to another warehouse to pick up a load. [01:29:46.120 --> 01:29:57.120] Well, when he's driving from the place he dropped the load to the place he picks up the load, what in the trucking industry they call that deadheading. [01:29:57.120 --> 01:30:00.120] Yes, yes. [01:30:00.120 --> 01:30:11.120] Is it iPhone or iSpy? In Germany, one man had to file a lawsuit to learn how his cell phone carrier was tracking his every move 24-7. [01:30:11.120 --> 01:30:15.120] I'm Dr. Catherine Albrecht and I'll have the creepy details in a moment. [01:30:15.120 --> 01:30:21.120] Privacy is under attack. When you give up data about yourself, you'll never get it back again. [01:30:21.120 --> 01:30:26.120] And once your privacy is gone, you'll find your freedoms will start to vanish too. [01:30:26.120 --> 01:30:31.120] So protect your rights, say no to surveillance and keep your information to yourself. [01:30:31.120 --> 01:30:41.120] Privacy, it's worth hanging on to. This message is brought to you by StartPage.com, the private search engine alternative to Google, Yahoo, and Bing. [01:30:41.120 --> 01:30:44.120] Start over with StartPage. [01:30:44.120 --> 01:30:48.120] Do you know how much data your cell phone company collects on you? [01:30:48.120 --> 01:30:55.120] In Germany, Green Party politician Malta Spitz didn't, so he asked. When his carrier objected, he sued. [01:30:55.120 --> 01:31:03.120] Tracking people's whereabouts is what phone companies do. To route calls efficiently, they ping customers' cell phones every few seconds. [01:31:03.120 --> 01:31:09.120] But when a court ordered Deutsche Telekom to cough up its records on Spitz, what he learned was shocking. [01:31:09.120 --> 01:31:18.120] In a six-month period, the company had logged his location 35,000 times, often to within a few hundred yards of his precise location. [01:31:18.120 --> 01:31:24.120] So the next time you turn on your cell phone, know this. Your carrier is not only watching, it's taking notes. [01:31:24.120 --> 01:31:31.120] Like Dr. Catherine Albrecht for StartPage.com, the world's most private search engine. [01:31:31.120 --> 01:31:36.120] I lost my son. My nephew. My uncle. My son. On September 11, 2001. [01:31:36.120 --> 01:31:39.120] Most people don't know that a third tower fell on September 11. [01:31:39.120 --> 01:31:44.120] World Trade Center 7, a 47-story skyscraper, was not hit by a plane. [01:31:44.120 --> 01:31:50.120] Although the official explanation is that fire brought down building 7, over 1,200 architects and engineers [01:31:50.120 --> 01:31:54.120] has looked into the evidence and believed there is more to the story. Bring justice to my son. [01:31:54.120 --> 01:31:58.120] My uncle. My nephew. My son. Go to building what.org. [01:31:58.120 --> 01:32:01.120] Why it fell, why it matters, and what you can do. [01:32:01.120 --> 01:32:06.120] Hey, it's Danny here for Hill Country Home Improvements. Did your home receive hail or wind damage from the recent storms? [01:32:06.120 --> 01:32:11.120] Come on, we all know the government caused it with their chemtrails, but good luck getting them to pay for it. [01:32:11.120 --> 01:32:15.120] Okay, I might be kidding about the chemtrails, but I'm serious about your roof. [01:32:15.120 --> 01:32:22.120] That's why you have insurance and Hill Country Home Improvements can handle the claim for you with little to no out-of-pocket expense. [01:32:22.120 --> 01:32:27.120] And we accept Bitcoin as a multi-year A-plus member of the Better Business Bureau with zero complaints. [01:32:27.120 --> 01:32:33.120] You can trust Hill Country Home Improvements to handle your claim and your roof right the first time. [01:32:33.120 --> 01:32:39.120] Just call 512-992-8745 or go to hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:39.120 --> 01:32:46.120] Mention the crypto show and get $100 off, and we'll donate another $100 to the Logos Radio Network to help continue this programming. [01:32:46.120 --> 01:32:51.120] So if those out-of-town roofers come knocking, your door should be locked in. [01:32:51.120 --> 01:32:57.120] That's 512-992-8745 or hillcountryhomeimprovements.com. [01:32:57.120 --> 01:32:59.120] Discounts are based on full roof replacement. [01:32:59.120 --> 01:33:02.120] I mean, I actually be kidding about chemtrails. [01:33:02.120 --> 01:33:09.120] You are listening to the Logos Radio Network. LogosRadionetwork.com. [01:33:32.120 --> 01:33:36.120] We've got three more callers and only three segments left. [01:33:36.120 --> 01:33:43.120] Atyk, do you have a specific question for us? [01:33:43.120 --> 01:33:45.120] No, I was just going to talk to you about that time. [01:33:45.120 --> 01:33:47.120] So please, you've got to go. No worries. I appreciate your time. [01:33:47.120 --> 01:33:50.120] And I'll just call back on Monday to talk to Eddie. [01:33:50.120 --> 01:33:54.120] Well, yeah, and tomorrow night we do a four-hour show, so we have a lot more time. [01:33:54.120 --> 01:33:59.120] And I spent time with this because this is an important point. [01:33:59.120 --> 01:34:06.120] When you take on any legal issue, we need to be careful and not start in the middle. [01:34:06.120 --> 01:34:15.120] When you get a ticket, you tend to want to defend yourself about based on the merits of the case. [01:34:15.120 --> 01:34:18.120] So I wasn't speeding or I didn't make any legal left turn. [01:34:18.120 --> 01:34:22.120] No, no, no wrong place to go. [01:34:22.120 --> 01:34:33.120] Yeah, first place to go is who are you and what authority do you have to do what you did? [01:34:33.120 --> 01:34:49.120] So when I have a website, traffic ticket dot website, and on there we have documents that demand that the officer prove up his authority to write the ticket in the first place. [01:34:49.120 --> 01:34:54.120] And then if they prove up that they have authority to write the ticket in the first place, [01:34:54.120 --> 01:35:08.120] then we challenge the sufficiency of the complaint because it doesn't establish that the statutory scheme applies to me because I was not acting in commerce. [01:35:08.120 --> 01:35:12.120] I don't talk about me having a right to travel. [01:35:12.120 --> 01:35:16.120] I don't even say that I wasn't in commerce. [01:35:16.120 --> 01:35:22.120] I say that the citation was insufficient because it did not show that I was in commerce. [01:35:22.120 --> 01:35:24.120] Does that make sense at least? [01:35:24.120 --> 01:35:28.120] Yeah, it doesn't make sense. [01:35:28.120 --> 01:35:34.120] Yeah, always that's the place we want to start and it's one of the hardest things for them to get passed. [01:35:34.120 --> 01:35:40.120] And the courts are so accustomed to people just laying down and rolling over for them. [01:35:40.120 --> 01:35:44.120] When you come after them, they don't know what to do. [01:35:44.120 --> 01:35:48.120] And you have to understand these are municipal courts. [01:35:48.120 --> 01:35:52.120] And the lawyer is in a municipal court. [01:35:52.120 --> 01:35:57.120] He's not the sharpest knife in the door or he would be out making the big bucks. [01:35:57.120 --> 01:35:58.120] Right, right. [01:35:58.120 --> 01:36:02.120] So you have an advantage in going after them and picking them up. [01:36:02.120 --> 01:36:06.120] Yeah, I totally understand how municipal courts and all that stuff works. [01:36:06.120 --> 01:36:08.120] I judge, my district commissioner. [01:36:08.120 --> 01:36:11.120] I totally get all that stuff. [01:36:11.120 --> 01:36:15.120] Okay, we'll listen in Monday night and talk to Eddie. [01:36:15.120 --> 01:36:19.120] He'll show you more specifically and how to go after these guys. [01:36:19.120 --> 01:36:22.120] And you said tomorrow you have a four hour show. [01:36:22.120 --> 01:36:23.120] Do you have more time? [01:36:23.120 --> 01:36:25.120] Yes, yes, I do. [01:36:25.120 --> 01:36:27.120] What time do the shows start tomorrow? [01:36:27.120 --> 01:36:32.120] The same time as today, 8 o'clock Central, 6 o'clock California. [01:36:32.120 --> 01:36:34.120] 6 o'clock California. [01:36:34.120 --> 01:36:35.120] Okay, all right. [01:36:35.120 --> 01:36:36.120] No problem. [01:36:36.120 --> 01:36:37.120] Thank you so much. [01:36:37.120 --> 01:36:39.120] I sincerely appreciate your time and God bless you. [01:36:39.120 --> 01:36:40.120] Take care. [01:36:40.120 --> 01:36:41.120] Okay. [01:36:41.120 --> 01:36:42.120] Thank you. [01:36:42.120 --> 01:36:43.120] Okay. [01:36:43.120 --> 01:36:44.120] Now we're going to John in New York. [01:36:44.120 --> 01:36:45.120] Hello, John. [01:36:45.120 --> 01:36:46.120] Hello. [01:36:46.120 --> 01:36:47.120] Hi, Randy. [01:36:47.120 --> 01:36:48.120] How are you? [01:36:48.120 --> 01:36:49.120] I am good. [01:36:49.120 --> 01:36:51.120] What do you have for us today? [01:36:51.120 --> 01:36:59.120] Well, a cop stopped me and I want to go over the elements of the stop to see if the cop violated any of my right. [01:36:59.120 --> 01:37:02.120] So please tell me when he did. [01:37:02.120 --> 01:37:04.120] I hear the facts. [01:37:04.120 --> 01:37:12.120] New York State BNC law says bicyclists should ride in the same direction with traffic. [01:37:12.120 --> 01:37:13.120] Now I was riding. [01:37:13.120 --> 01:37:14.120] Stop. [01:37:14.120 --> 01:37:15.120] Stop. [01:37:15.120 --> 01:37:16.120] Wrong place. [01:37:16.120 --> 01:37:17.120] Meh. [01:37:17.120 --> 01:37:18.120] Back up. [01:37:18.120 --> 01:37:20.120] Go ahead. [01:37:20.120 --> 01:37:24.120] What statute is, okay, this is a bicycle. [01:37:24.120 --> 01:37:25.120] He's asserting. [01:37:25.120 --> 01:37:27.120] It's not a motor vehicle. [01:37:27.120 --> 01:37:29.120] That's correct. [01:37:29.120 --> 01:37:39.120] So what authority does he have to regulate the operation of a bicycle? [01:37:39.120 --> 01:37:47.120] Well, I saw it in the VNT law in New York State that bicyclists are supposed to ride with traffic. [01:37:47.120 --> 01:37:49.120] I saw that in the BNC law. [01:37:49.120 --> 01:37:51.120] What is that? [01:37:51.120 --> 01:37:52.120] Oh, VNT. [01:37:52.120 --> 01:37:54.120] Vehicle and traffic law. [01:37:54.120 --> 01:37:55.120] Okay. [01:37:55.120 --> 01:38:02.120] Who is authorized to enforce the vehicle and traffic laws in New York? [01:38:02.120 --> 01:38:08.120] Well, everybody thinks it's police officers. [01:38:08.120 --> 01:38:10.120] Yeah, I know that. [01:38:10.120 --> 01:38:23.120] In Texas, the Department of Public Safety and in most states, Harry Truman got to, you know, when Roosevelt went out, [01:38:23.120 --> 01:38:26.120] Harry Truman became president and then he got elected. [01:38:26.120 --> 01:38:30.120] Harry Truman was a road builder before he got into politics. [01:38:30.120 --> 01:38:33.120] And so he had some specific ideas about roads. [01:38:33.120 --> 01:38:42.120] He thought the way roads were done fine were horrendous and he's the one that initiated the design of our interstate highways with [01:38:42.120 --> 01:38:54.120] clover leaves and tapered ramps, acceleration ramps. [01:38:54.120 --> 01:39:04.120] Because we were just getting big trucks designed and out there on the road and the safety of these things was horrendous. [01:39:04.120 --> 01:39:11.120] So he set up the commercial licensing scheme and all the states adopted it. [01:39:11.120 --> 01:39:25.120] And then he created, he had the states create a law enforcement agency to enforce that commercial transportation scheme. [01:39:25.120 --> 01:39:30.120] And those agencies we call state police. [01:39:30.120 --> 01:39:31.120] Right. [01:39:31.120 --> 01:39:37.120] It never occurs to most people that state police weren't created to enforce law. [01:39:37.120 --> 01:39:44.120] They were created to enforce a commercial transportation code. [01:39:44.120 --> 01:39:45.120] So. [01:39:45.120 --> 01:39:46.120] Okay. [01:39:46.120 --> 01:39:55.120] What Texas law says is the Department of Public Safety, which is created for this purpose, can enforce the Texas Transportation Code or a [01:39:55.120 --> 01:40:08.120] county commissioners court can assign five officers in the county to enforce the Texas Transportation Code and they have to enforce it on motorcycles unless there's [01:40:08.120 --> 01:40:10.120] inclement weather. [01:40:10.120 --> 01:40:16.120] Tennessee says that the Tennessee Highway Patrol can enforce the Transportation Code. [01:40:16.120 --> 01:40:23.120] But a police officer who is investigating an accident can write a citation under the Transportation Code. [01:40:23.120 --> 01:40:39.120] Illinois says the Secretary of State's police, which is their version of the state police, says only the Secretary of State may enforce the Transportation Code. [01:40:39.120 --> 01:40:43.120] So what does it say in New York? [01:40:43.120 --> 01:40:44.120] Hmm. [01:40:44.120 --> 01:40:45.120] Okay. [01:40:45.120 --> 01:40:46.120] Good point. [01:40:46.120 --> 01:40:47.120] I don't. [01:40:47.120 --> 01:40:48.120] That's where we start. [01:40:48.120 --> 01:40:51.120] Who the heck are you? [01:40:51.120 --> 01:40:57.120] What authority do you have to interfere with my peddling my behind? [01:40:57.120 --> 01:41:08.120] I just complained to my mother that my niece was trying to turn me into a male prostitute. [01:41:08.120 --> 01:41:09.120] What? [01:41:09.120 --> 01:41:17.120] Yeah, she loaned me her bicycle and I've been peddling my behind up and down the road all day. [01:41:17.120 --> 01:41:25.120] But I'm riding that bicycle, so who has authority to tell me how to ride that bicycle? [01:41:25.120 --> 01:41:26.120] Okay. [01:41:26.120 --> 01:41:28.120] Now he was a state police. [01:41:28.120 --> 01:41:32.120] And he has, but you're not on a motor vehicle. [01:41:32.120 --> 01:41:33.120] I'm sorry? [01:41:33.120 --> 01:41:36.120] You're not on a motor vehicle. [01:41:36.120 --> 01:41:38.120] That's true. [01:41:38.120 --> 01:41:48.120] Normally, laws concerning non-motor vehicles fall under ordinances. [01:41:48.120 --> 01:41:53.120] So first thing to look at is to be sure who has authority to enforce. [01:41:53.120 --> 01:41:58.120] With that done, now let's go to your issue and I'll stop interrupting you. [01:41:58.120 --> 01:41:59.120] Oh, no. [01:41:59.120 --> 01:42:03.120] That's one of the best interruptions I've ever heard. [01:42:03.120 --> 01:42:04.120] That was excellent. [01:42:04.120 --> 01:42:05.120] Thank you. [01:42:05.120 --> 01:42:08.120] Thank you. [01:42:08.120 --> 01:42:09.120] All right. [01:42:09.120 --> 01:42:14.120] So the New York State V&T law itself, now I read it several years ago. [01:42:14.120 --> 01:42:15.120] Now who knows? [01:42:15.120 --> 01:42:16.120] It could have changed. [01:42:16.120 --> 01:42:17.120] I should check it. [01:42:17.120 --> 01:42:22.120] But New York State V&T law of vehicle and traffic says bicycle should ride in the same direction [01:42:22.120 --> 01:42:23.120] of traffic. [01:42:23.120 --> 01:42:24.120] I read it myself. [01:42:24.120 --> 01:42:26.120] I was riding against traffic. [01:42:26.120 --> 01:42:27.120] Stay alive. [01:42:27.120 --> 01:42:28.120] I always do. [01:42:28.120 --> 01:42:32.120] I ride, you ride with traffic and you can't see when a car is coming to hit you. [01:42:32.120 --> 01:42:36.120] You ride against traffic and you might have some visual warning to stay alive. [01:42:36.120 --> 01:42:41.120] That just comes down to whoever wrote that law doesn't know his elbow from a hole in the [01:42:41.120 --> 01:42:44.120] ground and I'm being very, very client. [01:42:44.120 --> 01:42:45.120] All right. [01:42:45.120 --> 01:42:49.120] New York State Police stopped me and asked for my ID. [01:42:49.120 --> 01:42:51.120] I was operating a bicycle. [01:42:51.120 --> 01:42:57.120] Now did I have to prove or did I have to produce an ID at that point? [01:42:57.120 --> 01:43:04.120] If there is a law that says you must operate in a certain direction and you're in violation [01:43:04.120 --> 01:43:08.120] of that law, yes, now you have to provide an ID. [01:43:08.120 --> 01:43:09.120] Okay. [01:43:09.120 --> 01:43:15.120] Now, since I was not operating a motor vehicle, did I have to give them a driver's license? [01:43:15.120 --> 01:43:16.120] No. [01:43:16.120 --> 01:43:17.120] I didn't. [01:43:17.120 --> 01:43:18.120] Okay. [01:43:18.120 --> 01:43:21.120] I was correct in not giving them my driver's license, wasn't I? [01:43:21.120 --> 01:43:22.120] Right. [01:43:22.120 --> 01:43:26.120] The license doesn't apply to a bicycle. [01:43:26.120 --> 01:43:33.120] Well, unless New York law is specific, you have to have a driver's license in order to [01:43:33.120 --> 01:43:35.120] operate a bicycle in New York. [01:43:35.120 --> 01:43:36.120] No. [01:43:36.120 --> 01:43:37.120] No, it doesn't. [01:43:37.120 --> 01:43:39.120] Then you don't have to give them that. [01:43:39.120 --> 01:43:40.120] Hang on. [01:43:40.120 --> 01:43:41.120] Randy Kelton. [01:43:41.120 --> 01:43:42.120] Deborah Stevens rule of law radio. [01:43:42.120 --> 01:43:43.120] I'll call it number 512-646-1984. [01:43:43.120 --> 01:44:09.120] We'll be right back. [01:44:09.120 --> 01:44:16.120] We'll be right back. [01:44:39.120 --> 01:45:01.120] We'll be right back. [01:45:01.120 --> 01:45:28.120] We'll be right back. [01:45:28.120 --> 01:45:54.120] We'll be right back. [01:45:54.120 --> 01:46:16.120] We'll be right back. [01:46:16.120 --> 01:46:38.120] Okay. [01:46:38.120 --> 01:46:40.120] We are back. [01:46:40.120 --> 01:46:45.120] Randy Kelton, Deborah Stevens rule of law radio, and we're talking to John in New York. [01:46:45.120 --> 01:46:46.120] John. [01:46:46.120 --> 01:46:47.120] Well, thank you. [01:46:47.120 --> 01:46:49.120] Thank you very kindly, Randy. [01:46:49.120 --> 01:46:51.120] I always learn a lot from you. [01:46:51.120 --> 01:46:54.120] So I didn't have to produce ID. [01:46:54.120 --> 01:46:55.120] I gave him. [01:46:55.120 --> 01:46:56.120] All right. [01:46:56.120 --> 01:46:57.120] No, no, no. [01:46:57.120 --> 01:46:59.120] You didn't have to produce ID. [01:46:59.120 --> 01:47:05.120] Once an officer can articulate a violation of law, you have to ID, but you didn't have [01:47:05.120 --> 01:47:07.120] to give him a driver's license. [01:47:07.120 --> 01:47:08.120] Right. [01:47:08.120 --> 01:47:09.120] Right. [01:47:09.120 --> 01:47:10.120] So I gave him. [01:47:10.120 --> 01:47:14.120] What I did was I delayed giving them any ID because here's what happened. [01:47:14.120 --> 01:47:21.120] Then when I was contemplating that, and I was going to start looking for my ID, he looked [01:47:21.120 --> 01:47:29.120] at the bicycle, saw a large Christ sticker still on the bike, 169.99, and he asked me [01:47:29.120 --> 01:47:30.120] the following. [01:47:30.120 --> 01:47:32.120] That's your bike. [01:47:32.120 --> 01:47:34.120] I see the sticker is still on it. [01:47:34.120 --> 01:47:36.120] I was half a mile away from Walmart. [01:47:36.120 --> 01:47:38.120] You have to understand it. [01:47:38.120 --> 01:47:44.120] And I wasn't aware, Randy, that riding a bicycle with the Christ sticker on it is necessarily [01:47:44.120 --> 01:47:48.120] a probable cause to start questioning me on the ownership of the bike. [01:47:48.120 --> 01:47:50.120] Is that probable cause? [01:47:50.120 --> 01:47:55.120] Just because I've worn clothes for months with the Christ sticker still on my coat. [01:47:55.120 --> 01:47:58.120] That doesn't mean I stole the coat. [01:47:58.120 --> 01:48:02.120] So if having a large Christ sticker still on the bike. [01:48:02.120 --> 01:48:09.120] What you should have said to the officer was, howdy. [01:48:09.120 --> 01:48:12.120] I see you don't watch He-Haw. [01:48:12.120 --> 01:48:14.120] Oh, oh, how are you? [01:48:14.120 --> 01:48:15.120] Okay, I get you. [01:48:15.120 --> 01:48:16.120] All right. [01:48:16.120 --> 01:48:17.120] I certainly get you. [01:48:17.120 --> 01:48:18.120] You'll have to explain other. [01:48:18.120 --> 01:48:20.120] I'm a little slow on He-Haw. [01:48:20.120 --> 01:48:23.120] That's our grand old officer, Dr. He-Haw. [01:48:23.120 --> 01:48:25.120] What was her name? [01:48:25.120 --> 01:48:28.120] Who always had a Christ tag on her hat? [01:48:28.120 --> 01:48:29.120] Yeah. [01:48:29.120 --> 01:48:31.120] That's where I got it from. [01:48:31.120 --> 01:48:32.120] Yeah. [01:48:32.120 --> 01:48:33.120] Okay. [01:48:33.120 --> 01:48:34.120] My producer's telling me I'm screwing up. [01:48:34.120 --> 01:48:39.120] It was Minnie Pearl on Grand Ole Opry always had a Christ tag hanging on her hat. [01:48:39.120 --> 01:48:40.120] Yeah. [01:48:40.120 --> 01:48:41.120] Yeah, I remember that. [01:48:41.120 --> 01:48:42.120] Yeah. [01:48:42.120 --> 01:48:43.120] I used to watch that. [01:48:43.120 --> 01:48:44.120] Yeah. [01:48:44.120 --> 01:48:45.120] Okay. [01:48:45.120 --> 01:48:49.120] So having a Christ tag on the bike, is that probable cause to start questioning me about [01:48:49.120 --> 01:48:51.120] the ownership of the bike? [01:48:51.120 --> 01:48:52.120] Yeah. [01:48:52.120 --> 01:48:53.120] Yeah. [01:48:53.120 --> 01:48:55.120] It could be probable cause? [01:48:55.120 --> 01:48:56.120] Yeah. [01:48:56.120 --> 01:48:57.120] However. [01:48:57.120 --> 01:48:58.120] Okay. [01:48:58.120 --> 01:49:02.120] Just because he asks you questions, don't mean you have to answer them. [01:49:02.120 --> 01:49:03.120] Well, hang on. [01:49:03.120 --> 01:49:04.120] That's the Fifth Amendment. [01:49:04.120 --> 01:49:05.120] Yeah. [01:49:05.120 --> 01:49:07.120] No, no, no, no. [01:49:07.120 --> 01:49:12.120] Compelling you to answer the violation of the Fifth Amendment, the policeman can ask you [01:49:12.120 --> 01:49:14.120] anything he wants to. [01:49:14.120 --> 01:49:19.120] I was at the Secretary of State's building in Austin and tried to get him to arrest one [01:49:19.120 --> 01:49:20.120] of the clerks. [01:49:20.120 --> 01:49:27.120] They had a DPS guy come out and give me a hard time, so I called 911 on him. [01:49:27.120 --> 01:49:32.120] And instead of the Austin police showing up, more Highway Patrol showed up. [01:49:32.120 --> 01:49:34.120] And one of them was asking me questions. [01:49:34.120 --> 01:49:36.120] I told him to beat it. [01:49:36.120 --> 01:49:43.120] He said, Mr. Pelton, I have some questions here. [01:49:43.120 --> 01:49:44.120] Yep. [01:49:44.120 --> 01:49:49.120] Can't hear you. [01:49:49.120 --> 01:49:58.120] There's something between me and you, apparently we're having issues in the internet somewhere [01:49:58.120 --> 01:50:04.120] because my microphone is feeding back into my headset and I'm getting no cut out. [01:50:04.120 --> 01:50:07.120] So it's not in my system. [01:50:07.120 --> 01:50:10.120] We're having some internet issues that I can't fix. [01:50:10.120 --> 01:50:14.120] So if I cut out, let me know and I will try to repeat what I said. [01:50:14.120 --> 01:50:17.120] I'm afraid this is not an issue I can fix. [01:50:17.120 --> 01:50:26.120] I'm here in Hillbilly land in a small county in northern Tennessee and I'm surrounded by [01:50:26.120 --> 01:50:33.120] Hillbillies and I'm keen to ever one of them two or three times. [01:50:33.120 --> 01:50:35.120] Anyway, okay, go ahead, John. [01:50:35.120 --> 01:50:40.120] And I apologize, but yes, they can ask you anything they want to. [01:50:40.120 --> 01:50:42.120] You don't have to answer. [01:50:42.120 --> 01:50:43.120] Right. [01:50:43.120 --> 01:50:51.120] Okay, so the highway patrol showed up and said, Mr. Calton, we have questions to ask you. [01:50:51.120 --> 01:50:55.120] Okay, ask. [01:50:55.120 --> 01:50:57.120] All right. [01:50:57.120 --> 01:51:01.120] So I know you don't have to answer. [01:51:01.120 --> 01:51:10.120] And if he compels you to do so, I will arrest you while I didn't think that, you know, making a right, you can't convert that into a crime. [01:51:10.120 --> 01:51:13.120] Not even you could do that, Mr. Ossifer. [01:51:13.120 --> 01:51:17.120] So anyway, this goes to one of my rules. [01:51:17.120 --> 01:51:21.120] Never give fair warning. [01:51:21.120 --> 01:51:25.120] If the officer says if you don't answer, I'll arrest you. [01:51:25.120 --> 01:51:29.120] It would be nice if you have a cell phone on. [01:51:29.120 --> 01:51:30.120] Yeah. [01:51:30.120 --> 01:51:34.120] Take out the cell phone down 911. [01:51:34.120 --> 01:51:35.120] Yep. [01:51:35.120 --> 01:51:36.120] He interferes with you. [01:51:36.120 --> 01:51:39.120] He's interfering with the 911 call. [01:51:39.120 --> 01:51:40.120] Oh, yes. [01:51:40.120 --> 01:51:46.120] The dispatcher is sending an officer out to arrest him. [01:51:46.120 --> 01:51:49.120] Oh, that is so much fun. [01:51:49.120 --> 01:51:56.120] The problem is, is you have that call on recorded. [01:51:56.120 --> 01:51:59.120] Now you're the victim. [01:51:59.120 --> 01:52:06.120] They either refuse to dispatch or they dispatch someone and he refuses to take your complaint. [01:52:06.120 --> 01:52:11.120] You got, you just stacking up the complaints against them. [01:52:11.120 --> 01:52:15.120] And you just haven't lived until you call the police on the police. [01:52:15.120 --> 01:52:16.120] Okay, go ahead. [01:52:16.120 --> 01:52:18.120] I interrupted again. [01:52:18.120 --> 01:52:20.120] Okay. [01:52:20.120 --> 01:52:22.120] So I'm half a mile away from Walmart. [01:52:22.120 --> 01:52:32.120] I wasn't aware that riding a bike with the bicycle around it was probable cause, but you're saying that it could be or it is. [01:52:32.120 --> 01:52:41.120] Well, yeah, it could give the officer reasonable cause to have suspicion. [01:52:41.120 --> 01:52:42.120] Okay. [01:52:42.120 --> 01:52:44.120] That doesn't mean anything. [01:52:44.120 --> 01:52:51.120] That just means he can, it might give him a reason to ask more questions. [01:52:51.120 --> 01:52:57.120] But because he wants to ask questions does not compel you to answer. [01:52:57.120 --> 01:52:58.120] Right. [01:52:58.120 --> 01:52:59.120] Okay. [01:52:59.120 --> 01:53:07.120] So he kept asking me for my ID in the meantime and I started going through my pockets for the sales receipt, which I knew I had. [01:53:07.120 --> 01:53:12.120] He kept asking for the ID and I said, please one thing at a time, you're accusing me of theft. [01:53:12.120 --> 01:53:14.120] That's really what he was doing. [01:53:14.120 --> 01:53:16.120] So one thing at a time, please. [01:53:16.120 --> 01:53:18.120] I was nice about it. [01:53:18.120 --> 01:53:20.120] I will prove this bike is mine. [01:53:20.120 --> 01:53:22.120] He said, well, when did you buy it? [01:53:22.120 --> 01:53:24.120] I said two days ago. [01:53:24.120 --> 01:53:29.120] And I produced the receipt Randy and I dashed his little heart to the ground. [01:53:29.120 --> 01:53:34.120] He was looking to become the morning hero, the office hero on Monday morning. [01:53:34.120 --> 01:53:39.120] Anyway, had he stolen the receipt from me because I don't trust cops. [01:53:39.120 --> 01:53:46.120] I just simply called my credit card company and the Walmart employees who all knew me and would have immediately come to my defense. [01:53:46.120 --> 01:53:55.120] I couldn't help but knew that no, rather know that I bought the bike that had some special problems that they cleared up and they would remember. [01:53:55.120 --> 01:53:57.120] So you can tell I trust police. [01:53:57.120 --> 01:53:59.120] So I was operating a bike. [01:53:59.120 --> 01:54:01.120] So I wasn't going to give him any driver's license. [01:54:01.120 --> 01:54:06.120] I gave my Department of Social Services benefit card with a picture on it. [01:54:06.120 --> 01:54:08.120] And I did that for a reason. [01:54:08.120 --> 01:54:10.120] I did that for number one. [01:54:10.120 --> 01:54:12.120] He doesn't have any business looking at my license. [01:54:12.120 --> 01:54:18.120] Whether that helps me or hurts him doesn't make any difference. [01:54:18.120 --> 01:54:31.120] And I figured if I gave him my DSS card, I'm telling this clown, look, I don't want to play your games in court and get fine $200 for doing something that wasn't wrong to begin with. [01:54:31.120 --> 01:54:35.120] And so I gave him the DSS card. [01:54:35.120 --> 01:54:39.120] Here, hold on. [01:54:39.120 --> 01:54:42.120] He took the card to his car. [01:54:42.120 --> 01:54:43.120] He ran my name. [01:54:43.120 --> 01:54:44.120] No wants. [01:54:44.120 --> 01:54:45.120] No warrants. [01:54:45.120 --> 01:54:46.120] He missed again. [01:54:46.120 --> 01:54:48.120] I really disappointed him. [01:54:48.120 --> 01:54:51.120] The DSS card let him know I don't have money to play games with him in court. [01:54:51.120 --> 01:55:00.120] He handed it back to me and he said, I'm not going to cite you and ride safely now on the right side of the road so I can get myself killed. [01:55:00.120 --> 01:55:07.120] And when I'm dead, after somebody runs me over, they'll put that on my tombstone. [01:55:07.120 --> 01:55:08.120] What a great guy. [01:55:08.120 --> 01:55:13.120] He followed the law even though it was a stupid law and he got himself killed. [01:55:13.120 --> 01:55:15.120] What a civic minded individual. [01:55:15.120 --> 01:55:17.120] That's not going to happen. [01:55:17.120 --> 01:55:20.120] My life is worth more than a ticket. [01:55:20.120 --> 01:55:22.120] And that law is stupid. [01:55:22.120 --> 01:55:25.120] You've got to ride against traffic in order to see it coming. [01:55:25.120 --> 01:55:28.120] You might have a chance to save your life. [01:55:28.120 --> 01:55:30.120] That's all I got to say. [01:55:30.120 --> 01:55:35.120] Is there anything else that you can tell me that he violated any of my rights? [01:55:35.120 --> 01:55:39.120] No, apparently not. He can do a tarry stop. [01:55:39.120 --> 01:55:46.120] He didn't write a citation when he could have. [01:55:46.120 --> 01:55:50.120] So it was a stupid citation and he knew it. [01:55:50.120 --> 01:55:55.120] But no, he didn't try to beat you up or bully you. [01:55:55.120 --> 01:55:57.120] So he did write. [01:55:57.120 --> 01:56:01.120] It's his job to find bad guys. [01:56:01.120 --> 01:56:07.120] He asked his questions, he got his questions answered and then he went away and left you alone. [01:56:07.120 --> 01:56:10.120] Yeah, yeah, that's true. [01:56:10.120 --> 01:56:17.120] You ought to call his boss and say, you know, this guy stopped me out here and he thought I'd stole this bicycle. [01:56:17.120 --> 01:56:23.120] And he checked and found out I didn't steal this bicycle and then he went away and left me alone. [01:56:23.120 --> 01:56:28.120] And you ought to tell him, I appreciate you did his job right. [01:56:28.120 --> 01:56:35.120] And that'll give these police reason to hold us in higher regard. [01:56:35.120 --> 01:56:40.120] Only over here is this complaining about him. [01:56:40.120 --> 01:56:44.120] I did his job right. He should get a at a boy. [01:56:44.120 --> 01:56:52.120] I had my brand new avalanche pull over on the side of the road with a motor in the back and I'm tightening it up because it's moving around. [01:56:52.120 --> 01:56:57.120] I don't want it to shift and scratch up under the avalanche because my wife would murder me. [01:56:57.120 --> 01:57:01.120] My patrol stopped in the road. It's a drizzly rain. [01:57:01.120 --> 01:57:05.120] He rolled down his left side window and he said, do you need any help? [01:57:05.120 --> 01:57:11.120] And I told him, no, I'm just tightening up this motor to make sure it doesn't come loose and scratch up mama's new car. [01:57:11.120 --> 01:57:17.120] He said, okay, I was just checking to see if he needed any help and he rolled up his window and left. [01:57:17.120 --> 01:57:26.120] I called the sergeant and told him where I was at and what time it was and that one of your officers pulled over [01:57:26.120 --> 01:57:30.120] and rolled down his window and asked if I needed any help. [01:57:30.120 --> 01:57:36.120] And the sergeant knew me and hated me and he said, well, what's the problem, Mr. Carlson? [01:57:36.120 --> 01:57:45.120] No problem at all. I just wanted to tell you how much I appreciated the fact that the officer genuinely offered to help [01:57:45.120 --> 01:57:58.120] and did not use the situation as a means to investigate to see if he could find a reason to charge me with the crime. [01:57:58.120 --> 01:58:04.120] He generally stopped to offer help and I just wanted you to know how much I appreciated it. [01:58:04.120 --> 01:58:10.120] Two years later, I walked into the J.P.'s office and there's about a half a dozen cops in there [01:58:10.120 --> 01:58:15.120] and this big tall guy walked up to me and said, well, hello, Mr. Carlson. [01:58:15.120 --> 01:58:19.120] And I looked up at him and he said, you don't recognize me, do you? [01:58:19.120 --> 01:58:25.120] I said, did you arrest me? And one of these others said, I did. The other said, I did. [01:58:25.120 --> 01:58:29.120] The other said, I will. Because they all knew me. [01:58:29.120 --> 01:58:37.120] And I said, no, he said, well, I'm the one that offered to help you when you were tying that motor down. [01:58:37.120 --> 01:58:50.120] Two years later, and he knew precisely who I was, that means that that was really good for him. [01:58:50.120 --> 01:58:58.120] Bibles for America is offering absolutely free, a unique study Bible called the New Testament Recovery Version. [01:58:58.120 --> 01:59:05.120] The New Testament Recovery Version has over 9,000 footnotes that explain what the Bible says verse by verse, [01:59:05.120 --> 01:59:08.120] and you to know God and to know the meaning of life. [01:59:08.120 --> 01:59:11.120] Order your free copy today from Bibles for America. [01:59:11.120 --> 01:59:20.120] Call us toll free at 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. [01:59:20.120 --> 01:59:26.120] This translation is highly accurate and it comes with over 13,000 cross references, [01:59:26.120 --> 01:59:30.120] plus charts and maps and an outline for every book of the Bible. [01:59:30.120 --> 01:59:36.120] This is truly a Bible you can understand. To get your free copy of the New Testament Recovery Version, [01:59:36.120 --> 01:59:41.120] call us toll free at 888-551-0102. [01:59:41.120 --> 01:59:52.120] That's 888-551-0102 or visit us online at bfa.org. 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